The fog of the 2015 general election is finally clearing up; the falsehoods sold to the people as change are unravelling at dizzying speeds. Even some vociferous supporters of President Muhammadu Buhari are deserting him in droves. Those who have not openly expressed some apprehension about the path the “messiah” has chosen to lead the country are grumbling and sniveling. However, a few diehards are still clinging to a tiny strand of hope that a miracle just might happen and things would change for the better under his government.

Well, it is going to boil down to the old saying I told you so. I can bet my bottom naira that nothing is going to change, at least not from what we have seen so far. As I have repeatedly stated in this column, change cannot come from a man who has not changed one bit, nor shown the slightest inclination to change contrary to the tales that were peddled on the campaign train. That will only happen when it’s proved that a leopard can now change its spots, or a tiger can change its stripes. His recent actions are a further proof of his ironclad narrow-minded, and ethnically inclined nature.

Those who collectively misled the people that Buhari had changed but are now singing a different tune must be held to account. We were bombarded with all sorts of virtuous and exemplary conducts of his past, and told his ethno-religious tendencies were “contrived” to undermine him. We were assured that Buhari would heal this land and restore hope to a fractured people. That has not happened; instead he has more than any president in the history of Nigeria consciously exacerbated the ethnic and religious divisions of the country by his actions and total display of insensitivity by his appointments.

They told us that he was the expected one – the long-awaited messiah who would bring back the glory of the fatherland and restore the pride of a people that were terribly famished. That wishful thinking has now clearly exploded in the faces of the proponents who spent their precious naira burnishing his image with cosmetics, as the candidate played along to the excitement of many.

In the last one year, the Nigerian economy has practically collapsed under the great “fixer”; the business environment has been scorched to the ground. Hunger and starvation have become daily companions of many people such that parents now exchange children for food. The change agents told Nigerians the ominous sounds of the prospect of a Buhari presidency that rang out so loudly during the electioneering were in fact drumbeats of exhilaration, hope and renewal.

Today, Nigeria stands challenged in all spheres, rudderless and floundering like never before. And of course we have so many astonishingly ridiculous and perverse people making silly excuses for the man who clearly has no business being at the helm of affairs of this country. Now it seems so obvious that Buhari and his party were very good at making promises but only excel spectacularly at making excuses for not fulfilling them.

The clamour for change can be categorised into four broad subheads, viz., the genuine change-seekers, the willfully blinded, those that lost out in the power struggle and had become spiteful, and the extremely partisan and sneaky activists who now even look the other way as the rule of law is mocked and torn to shreds.

It is true that many people yearned for a more fundamental change and desired it desperately; indeed, they still do. They constituted the genuine but ignorant, naive, vulnerable and undiscerning majority. These genuine change-seekers however became easily susceptible to the illusions called “change” promised by the All Progressives Congress (APC) and its standard-bearer who walked about with padded feet, waving and smiling sweetly at everyone to frenzied applauses from enthusiastic crowds.

Secondly were those who chose to be willfully blinded to the danger signals that were so glaringly visible that then Candidate Muhammadu Buhari represents. Thirdly was the category who embraced change more out of spite and malice than conviction that Buhari’s presidency would bring the much-needed elixir and healing to this troubled country. Having lost out in the struggle for power and control, they wanted to get back at former President Goodluck Jonathan. And in a clear act of sheer desperation, progressive-minded people joined forces with ultra-conservatives in an unholy alliance to get power.

Lastly were members of the intellectual/activist class who staked their reputations built over many years to sway support for the general on the extremely naive and dishonest premise that Buhari had changed. By endorsing Buhari, they were endorsing a brand of populism rooted on a campaign of half-truths, “true lies”, ignorance, prejudice, sectional politics and outright deception driven by a motivation to mislead the people to achieve power. To this group, the end justified the means.

The intellectual/activist class is particularly guilty of the situation we find ourselves today. They vouched for Buhari with such vigour and gusto that left the discerning dumbfounded. Our own hero and Nobel laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, stood shoulder above all others on this score. This was how Soyinka expressed his love for him: “It is however just as purblind to insist that he has not demonstrably striven to become what he most glaringly was not, to insist that he has not been chastened by intervening experience and – most critically – by a vastly transformed environment – both the localised and the global.” This to me was a pure fiction.

There is a saying in the land of my fathers that the hardest thing in life is vouching for someone, especially someone you barely know. When you do that, you are indirectly saying, ‘I’m putting my reputation on the line. I believe this person is a good person, with good character’, or has changed. This was what Nigerians were told. Soyinka and co. stood as referees for Buhari when he applied for the position of the president of Nigeria. They vouched for a changed Buhari and encouraged the public to employ him for the top job.

Will Soyinka honestly tell Nigerians whether this was the change he assured them would come from Buhari? Has Soyinka seen the lopsided appointments Buhari has been making across all strata of government? It is a chilling reminder of his past stint in office, particularly his tenure as the chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF); a past that was denied by his hysterical supporters in the run-up to the election.

Professor Pat Utomi was one of those who like our own dear Soyinka put his reputation on the line to reassure the people that Buhari “will restore hope” and lead Nigeria out of the woods during the high fever of electioneering.

You can imagine my profound shock and disbelief a few months ago when he launched a scalding attack on President Buhari and his government for the beyond-belief manner he was managing the national fault lines as well as his poor handling of the economy. This was what he was reported to have said:

“The problem with Buhari’s administration is his medieval mindset. He excludes rather than includes. So, he does not get the best idea. He is insular. Because of their medieval mindset, they have created a country that is more divided than they met it. And that is a problem for leadership that is marching towards progress. His ideas go back 30 years and they are irrelevant to this world. Open up your mind and listen to people and you can make progress. To lead is to serve. To lead, you must be knowledgeable. People don’t follow somebody who doesn’t know where he is going. Otherwise, you fall into a ditch.”

After reading that statement, I could not but asked myself and anyone who cared to listen, did he just know this about Buhari? I’m baffled as to how I could have seen it all and more experienced people like Utomi didn’t.

As if Utomi’s about-face was not dramatic enough, read what Oby Ezekwesili of Bring Back Our Girls fame had to say about the administration:

“Buhari’s economic policies are archaic and opaque, reminiscent of his first coming in the 80s. During that era, inflation spiralled. During that era, jobs were lost. During that era, the economic growth level dipped. That era wasn’t the best of eras in economic progress. “What did not work in 1984 cannot possibly be a solution in a global economy that’s much more integrated.”

She accused Buhari of rehashing the same “command and control” approach towards economic issues which has left the country’s economic indices worse off, adding: “We have lost the single digits inflation status we maintained in past administrations.”

The question we should all ask our bouncy campaigner is: did she just know this about Buhari? The truth is, she was one of those who consciously ignored the danger signals that were all so visible to everyone but which many chose to be willfully blinded to. The Chibok girls’ plight became a vote-catcher for then Candidate Buhari who repeatedly played it up and assured the nation it would top his list of priorities only to quickly relegate it to the footnote after gaining power.

Where is Professor Charles Soludo? Is he still in this country? If yes, then he must be grumbling quietly by now about the state of the economy. That is, if his economic theories still make any sense. But why is he not talking? The change he helped foist on the people is mutating into a crippling police state.

The economy is in a perilous state – on the verge of a recession. Is he not aware? To the chagrin of investors recently, a “changed” Buhari lest we forget, talked down the CBN new forex policy moments after endorsing it, thereby making many potential investors to nervously wait and watch from the sidelines. Now, won’t Soludo tell Nigerians how much the country has lost through the mismanagement of the economy, lack of policy direction and lost investment opportunities under one year of Buhari — N10 trillion, N20 trillion, N30 trillion or more? It will be interesting to hear from him, that is, if he still has the courage of his conviction. It is a crying shame that a first-class economist of Soludo’s stature was one of those who just couldn’t see through the facade of lies; maybe he did, but was driven more by petty revenge and that disease that afflicts only black people.

It is a double tragedy that he even aided and abetted the campaign of malicious lies with his allegation of “missing” or “mismanaged” N30 trillion during the run-up to the presidential election. It was a season when the walking wounded with malice in their hearts would come to the public space to spew rubbish just because they wanted to hug the headlines the next day. It keeps me up at night knowing that they willfully led this nation back to a replay of 1984/85, the consequences of which are the debilitating economic and socio-political crises we have today.

Let Nigerians ask former President Olusegun Obasanjo whether this is the “Nigeria of our dreams” he so gleefully told the world Buhari was building some months ago. The same Obasanjo acknowledged even before the election that Buhari knew next to nothing about economic management but went on to recommend him for the top job. Obasanjo who instituted an enquiry into the activities of the PTF even denied the findings. It was the height of fierce determination to push through his spiteful “change”. If Buhari was not good on the economy, he has even proved worse on politics. No one can tell for sure, maybe, just maybe, this was the change they meant after all.

18 responses to “THE CONSPIRACY OF BANKRUPT INTELLECTUALS THAT FOISTED DISASTROUS APC AND BUHARI ON NIGERIANS – BY SHAKA MOMODU”

  1. One Nigeria is a business entity owned by click of Nigeria mafias parading as leaders with their foreign allies …..they knows the right way to go but will not because it will not serve the best interest of their cartel…and this the reason why they keep recycling the same old leaders to maintain their Nigeria business …….We Biafran’s needs referendum to exit one Nigeria ……IN BIAFRAEXIT WE STAND NO GOING BACK………..

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    1. It is the most preposterous contemplation for anybody, considering what is happening today in climes where personal interest had manipulated some folks to opt for disintegration. Believe you me, if today your family alone is made a nation state, the dissenting tendency which you harbour today will still manifest itself in them to want to further disintegrate. South Sudan and the like are shinning examples. You are free as an individual to renounce your nationality and go wither you like than propagating campaign of dissension.

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  2. Going through this, one can easily conclude where the writer belongs. A good writer will look at all sides of the coin. What about the thieving politicians who stole the money? What about the reserve that was depleted. The issue is beyond Buhari or some people’s love for the dismemberment of Nigeria. It is how well those who have been there before did. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala forthrightly said the immediate past government, unlike the Obasanjo’s that she also served, did nothing to save money when the petrodollar was on the upward swing. They spent everything. The then president just distributed the money under the silly guise that “na our oil money, make we chop am finish”. How so stupid! And without hiding that you were an intellectual looking at the solution to the country’s problems, you exposed yourself as one whose main aim was just to voice your craze for a return to Biafra. I have no issue with those who want to bail out of the union. But they should spare a thought not to lead others sheepishly into committing mass suicide. You think the South-South supports your dream? Wait until then and see how they will leave you in the lurch. They don’t trust the Igbo nation because they believe you will not see them as partners but those to oppress. I think it is better to carry this out with some wisdom and let each one part willing to leave to do so under an atmosphere of peace. That way, we will avoid bloodshed, especially of innocent women and children. One last word: In the past, the East was always eager to support the North and had always played the second fiddle sheepishly and joyfully. That mentality must give way to one of a freeborn of equals. For as long as people place personal interest and money above spiritual emancipation, nothing can be achieved. I hope you will not come out to be abusive as is usual with some Igbo when they don’t like what others feel about a common matter. If you folks do, it will be typical and nothing to worry about.

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    1. You are dead wrong. Okonjo in the last administration planned to save for the rainy day but the governors insisted that the money must be shared. The fed. Govt was dragged to court on this. Were you not in the country then. I hate it when educated people make some comments that are unfounded, excuse me please.

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    2. You guys still see the truth and argue, all these stolen nonsense without any proof is not selling anymore even with all the so called looted find the country was still going in the right direction economically. Go ask the man who used his son to exchange for rice what he prefers now the so called corrupt govt where he can get food and the tainted man of integrity who obviously is dragging us to recession and starvation and u know d answer already

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    3. Joe Bankole, this peace never mentioned Biafra. When will this Igbophobia end in this country? Which tribe trusts each other in this Nigeria? Tell the world how much the Yorubas are trusted. Have you ever heard of green snakes in green grasses? You have fetched maggot infested firewood and you are already afraid of the visit of the lizards. I am not surprised because that is the mark of your kindred; cowards and dangerously untrustworthy.

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    4. Ngozi explained what happened in a very vergue manner. Do you know why the governors forum collapsed into two? The one lead by Amaechi and the Jonah Jang governor s faction. I will explain it to you.

      The then president in the person of Goodluck Ebele Jonathan was warned by this same minister of finance that they should save because of the oil price boom in fact the ever highest of his regime. GEJ agreed, but had to discourse it with other stake holders in the likes of: malam Sanusi Lamido (then governor of the central bank of Nigeria), Dezine Alixson Maduekwe(petroleum minister), Ngozi okonjo Iwela(finance minister) this four agreed to bring it to the table of the nationao executive arm for deliberations. The house accepted that proposal with every sence of responsibility. Now the next stage is to be able to convince the state governors to accept. That is where the issue eventually hinged and never saw the light of success it was meant for. That lead to the splitting of the governors forum after Amaechi, Fashiola and their cohut refused the proposal vehimently of saving for the rainy days such as this. They actually were claiming that the money Nigeria has is enough to carry the nation through for another four years even after his(GEJ) regim. That was why GEJ wanted to rest Amaechi (then governors forum chairman) so that somebody that will give less headache will be selected. PDP 1 selected Jonah Jang while PDP 2 went with Amaechi with 16 vs 19 votes respectively. Then there was a whole lot of black mail against the president. Well since the president wanted peace he asked the governors what they want him to do hey said the money should be shared. That was how they got this pont that they did not save for the rainy day. The option of the then president was to think what he could do with the money, he started giving grants through the you win program.

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    5. @ Joe Bankole, if the issue is beyond Buhari as you claim the wise thing would have been for him to give up the post. You should desist from pointing accusing finger on the past administration because the issue transcends beyond the preceding administration of GEJ too. On Biafra, we want a peaceful exist but your present government is refusing that. You must have heard of Brexit? We want our own Brafexit. Forget who will support our cause, we want to be out and need not your support or comment. We are fully aware of saboteurs who claim to be Igbos but in fact aren’t.

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    6. Shariff Durugordon Avatar
      Shariff Durugordon

      I bemoan any attitude that contrived in disguise to being hypocritical .Since the writer came across in certain opinion as bias, the narrative that singled an open Ibo, bashing was rather anachronistic and holds no water. Ngozi Okonjo Iweala,was clear in her exoneration of former president Jonathan,who had argued in support of “saving for the rainy season”, from the oil, windfalls; against the governor Rotimi Amaechi, led governors, decision on what happens to the said money, which they decided to share.Methinks:The right thing to do would be to find out why a president, couldn’t wield his strength or executive fiat by making the final decision on the extra funds; in lieu of studying to extricate a chapter in the law that ascertain such premise.That said, as a smarter head, why not correct without being pugnacious. To not do that denigrated the message.

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  3. You lie badly. It’s either mischief or you are relaying what somebody else told you

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  4. @joebankole, I will attempt to summarize your comment thus, please correct me if I am wrong:
    It does not matter what kind of change we get, it also does not matter to which direction that change points us, anything is better than the status quo of the last administration.
    I could not help understanding your comment in this light, as I saw nothing in the OP glorifying the last administration. If anything, what I saw was a question that still begs answers: Was (is) Buhari the solution to the 21st century Nigeria?

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  5. JoeBankole, Leopard will not change its color. E dey una body. See white and call it black. For years you and your people thrive by deceit and knavism but your plan has failed. You don’t decide for Niger delta. They have come of age. They now realise that yoruba has been fooling them. You deceive them to steal their oil and live like kings in the southwest. Having the best of every thing built with oil money, owning most of the oil wells and leaving desolation, devastation, poverty and ruin in the Niger-delta. You distorted history to claim that every Nigerian except igbos come from yoruba.
    Well it’s upto them to continue to be your slaves when you are supposed to be their slaves because you have nothing but live kings at their expense. It’s upto them to allow your distorted ideology of using foolish Widow to deceive and continue to subjugate them. They can call your bluff and put yoruba and hausa where they belong by taking back their wealth and controlling it. How long will they continue to be deceived by yoruba who don’t care about anybody but themselves.
    The east once had coal and Nigerian colonial and first Republic lavished the coal wealth on Lagos, kaduna and kano. You greedy guys left the area devastated but God helped the igbo to bounce back. It’s on record that it was the search for more coal that revealed the oil and in your greed to steal the oil unchallenged you were ready to die.
    I assure you that 2016 is not 1966 or 67. If your greediness to continue to steal the oil that is not yours remains incurable and war breaks out, be sure that Lagos and all those cities built with stolen wealth have a lot to loose. Have it at the back of your mind. The war of 2016 will be a lot different from what happened in 66-67. If you doubt that then tell me why federal troops have not overrun Boko Haram and Niger-delta Avengers. Just pray for the amicable resolution of the present oppression of the Igbos and Niger-deltans.

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  6. The part of the article I like most is the categorization of the “change-seekers” into four namely, the genuine, the willfully blinded, the spitefully and the partisan. The previous two commentators has proven the writer to be accurate simply by filling in at least “two blank spaces” with their names. Hahahaha. I am still considering where to fill in my own name. I think I have to utilize my “lifeline” to call my friends. “I want to be a millionnaire”!!!!

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  7. The part of the article I like most is the author’s categorization of “change seekers” into four namely the genuine, the willfully blinded, the spiteful and the partisan. The first two commentators just proved that categorization accurate as they simply filled in their own names separately into two of those groups. I am still struggling to find where I belong and I think I should use my “lifeline” to call some of my friends as I too “want to be a millionnaire”!!!

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  8. Felix O. Amadi Avatar
    Felix O. Amadi

    Where Is Fr. Ejike Mbaka and his theory of the pigeons?

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  9. Joebankole I think you are making, the one not being mature here, the writer never attack any individual, or tribe, when you now start mentioning igbos, a particular tribe, you would have made your point without mentioning the Igbo, am an egba man am not from the South south or south east, I don’t know the job you do, where you work, I don’t know where you reside, but if your work is not the type that bring you only closer to the rich and the cream of the society, you would know what people go through, people are suffering big time, those that are even working with government are yet to be paid for some months now, no regular electricity power supply, no food, everythings is just skyrocketing, security was bad during the past but worse now, whereby the one million and one boys are terrorizing every street in Lagos, they will rob for like four hours, from number 1 house to the last one on the street not one to interrupt them, see my friend let put sentiment and party aside let face reality, before Buhari came to power , during their campaign he articulated all the errors of the past administration, all the past administration should have done which they didn’t do, that he have the technical know how to fix Nigeria in less and no time, I remembered he said within six months he will crush Book haram and bring back chibouk girls, fuel will go for 45 naira, at least adequate power supply, today in mine area you get light for 10 minutes every four days, but blin the past @ lest we do get 15 hours or more sometimes, I know of a place where friend live and enjoy three day uninterrupted in the past, in that same area they now hardly get light for 30 minutes, yet tariff was increased, making us to pay for what we never uses, looking at the anti corruption war, if you will agree with me it is one side, how can chief of army staff have houses (3) in Dubai where did he get it? No retired o serving officer and yet mr President defended him, the issue of the first lady over money matter in abroad, this people have been allowed to be probe and if not found guilty they should be released and if they are guilty let them dance the music . other men who are corrupt under administration what do you say about those one, let throw away sentiment o people are dying

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  10. Unfortunate people reverse an honest analysis for selfish and tribal reasons. We are doing a x ray of our nation. The truth must be said as I acknowledge and outrightly condemn the senseless looting of our collective wealth under the watch f President Goodluck Jonathan. That was a tragedy of sort for an administration that had economic policies that was leading us into big players league. The relative calmness and tranquility we enjoyed despite the sponsored Boko Haram. Nigeria was to say the least heading towards a defined destination. Every open minded patroit appreciate this fact. Standing thevery point we are nationally and rreviewing the journey so far, it is a big disappointed, disillusionment and regression. I can not believe our country is where we are now under the present government. I am not of the stock that personalise rather I consider what you brought on table not who brought it. From inception , the PMB govt deceived themselves and the nation. Knowing they did not have the competencies to manage both economic , political and social life of our nation. I will in the course of further discussions light from these three cardinal mentioned but the truth is obvious that nothing but sliding and slumping in almost all facets of our nation.

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  11. I followed the Nigerian Politics closely for the first time in my life during the last 2 general elections and particularly the 2015 general election. Reading your post this morning, i can’t help but agree with you totally. You see, there was a desperate and frenzied move by the North in alliance with the West, disgruntled former PDP politicians, and so many other elements that i don’t have the strength to mention here to maintain the status quo of recycling of OLD politicians and ensuring that power goes to the North. So everybody turned a blind eye to the obvious facts staring us in the face that PMB was not intellectually and socially the right person for that top job. We were scammed and we gullibly fell for it. I just hope we all would have learnt our lessons by the end of his tenure (that is if the country survives the remaining 3years with the way it is spiralling)

    Goodluck Jonathan had a vision, a team and the drive. What he just lacked was not being decisive in tackling the unchecked looting that was going on in his administration. Thats the only area i found him wanting but to be honest, you don’t fight looting the way PMB is going about it, you do that by strengthening and creating new systems… Nigeria never had a system and that was why the looting could happen un abbeted… We just needed a system, not a manhunt…

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