Archbishop Emeritus of the Catholic Archdiocese of Lagos, Anthony Cardinal
Olubunmi Okogie, yesterday released a statement criticizing the Buhari-led
government. In the statement which was signed by the Director of Social Communications
of the Diocese, Monsignor Gabriel Osu, Cardinal Okogie criticized Buhari for
failing to heed court injunctions that granted both Dasuki and Pro-Biafra group
leader, Nnamdi Kanu, bail. The respected religious leader asked what sort of
"Change" is the President talking about when such acts of judicial
disobedience is now the order of the day.
According to Okogie, the belief of many Nigerians is that the government is turning the nation into a police state comprising of the President, the EFCC and the DSS. He alleged that governors, who arm-twisted Okonjo-Iweala into signing reserves held by Central Bank, are today ministers in the All Progressives Congress (APC) government. Read part of the statement below
According to Okogie, the belief of many Nigerians is that the government is turning the nation into a police state comprising of the President, the EFCC and the DSS. He alleged that governors, who arm-twisted Okonjo-Iweala into signing reserves held by Central Bank, are today ministers in the All Progressives Congress (APC) government. Read part of the statement below
“He (Buhari) must retool, refocus and aggressively face the social,
economic (fiscal and monetary) problems we have head-on, without letting the
anti-corruption drive look like a political distraction. A snail-paced and
disordered methodology in governance, his apparent disdain for judicial
authorities and decisions, a lost today and found tomorrow 2016 Budget debacle,
and a rather rudderless and confused Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) with an
unclear monetary policy strategy (inevitably increasing the economic
uncertainties being faced by Nigerians), have set alarm bells ringing in my
mind and in the minds of many discerning Nigerians. Indeed, his perceived
discordant relationship with the leadership of the Legislature has many
naysayers chuckling and remarking that President Buhari’s government is heading
into his comfort zone, a one man show. A lot of Nigerians are beginning to feel
that Buhari is fast transforming this nation into a police state where the president,
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Department of
State Security (DSS) rule the day. What they say is given lurid headlines in
the media, and it seems to all that some of the defendants cum accused persons
are being tried in the press with information conveniently slipping into the
hands of the press, presumably from the security agencies, even before such
people have been charged to court. The pro-Biafran activist, Nnamdi Kanu and
the erstwhile NSA, Sambo Dasuki, were granted bail by the courts but such bails
were disregarded by the security agents under Buhari’s watch. Unfortunately,
democracy is difficult and this government must realise that democracy
pervasively coloured with impunity, arbitrariness and highhandedness, cannot
be used to fight and correct the financial impunity and reckless abandon of
the previous administration, even if it is more difficult to do so; the rule of
law must be obeyed and be the order of the day. If Buhari wants to leave a
creditable legacy come 2019, he should retool the bureaucracy. For instance,
the roof of the Central Bank is leaking water. Governors, who arm-twisted
Okonjo-Iweala into signing out our reserves held by Central Bank, are today
ministers in the All Progressives Congress (APC) government. We are still
talking about change and corruption when old things refuse to pass away! These
political gimmicks can only carry away gullible or naive Nigerians. President
Buhari should beam his flashlight on policies and programmes that will lift up
the masses. Existing industries are almost dead and they call for urgent
revitalisation. The budget ought to aid solutions to the mass unemployment,
rural-urban migration, skewedness in the distribution of income, abject rural
poverty and industrialisation of rural economy. The 774 local government capitals
should be linked to their state capitals. Even the mindboggling infrastructure
deficits can take the entire tenure to address. The weakness in the bureaucracy
has not been addressed. The problem the APC government is trying to solve is
bound to re-occur because it is treatment of effect rather than the cause,” he
said, adding that causative factors are being totally ignored or glossed-over
while institutional weakness pervades the Ministries Departments and Agencies
(MDAs), offices of the Accountant-General, Auditor-General and the Central
Bank. Our Change must change something. How could we continue to talk of change
in a static system? How could we be talking of change when the same crew are
governors, ministers, senators, and members of the House of Representatives?
This is a cyclical devolution of power to the same people who are never out of
power! What sort of change is the President talking about? When will the youth
take over when even a governor does not take a bow and go? When shall we plan
for the replacement of delinquent leadership? This is what constitutes change.
Change is not changing from Jonathan to Buhari. Change is behavioural and
pervades all levels of society including the family, the church, the mosque,
schools, market women and business men. When we talk of change, we talk of
positive-salutary, healthy growth and development oriented change that cuts
across the entire gamut of the society. What sort of change is this that
ignores the glaring unequal distribution of national income? It is absurd that
the same government that is unable to pay N18,000 per month to the lowest
grade of labour can afford to pay N1.8 million per month to anyone in the economy.
Why must tax payers’ money be used to feed Mr. President and his family? Why
must the tax payers’ money be used to buy brand new exotic vehicles for the
legislature, judges, ministers and governors when they are heavily paid? Why
don’t they use loan finance or mortgage finance to buy their cars and houses?
This is also a form of looting and it is the cause of grounding the economy and
calling in an IMF spin-doctor all the time. Precisely two years ago this same
President Buhari rejected off-hand this use of a spin doctor to heal the ailing
economy. He preferred the use of counter-trade and inward looking policies
like cutting down costs and flamboyant exotic life styles. Today, I am not so
sure we have the same Buhari. I do hope he has not changed all the colours of
the rainbow. The ruling elites are living a luxurious lifestyle while the masses
are in abject poverty and yet we are all Nigerians. Enough of this
change-conundrum”.
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