The opposition Peoples Democratic Party, Labour Party, the Academic Staff Union of Universities and other Nigerians on Saturday picked holes in the claim by the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), that his regime had done well.
In his Independence Day speech on Saturday, Buhari had given himself pass mark on anti-corruption fight, health care and other areas.
“We strengthened the institutions for tackling corruption and also cultivated international support, which aided the repatriation of huge sums of money illegally kept outside the country.
“In order to address insecurity, we worked methodically in reducing insurgency in the North-East, militancy in the Niger Delta, ethnic and religious tensions in some sections of Nigeria along with other problems threatening our country.
“Our efforts in resetting the economy manifested in Nigeria exiting two economic recessions by the very practical and realistic monetary and fiscal measures to ensure effective public financial management. In addition, the effective implementation of the Treasury Single Account and cutting down on the cost of governance also facilitated early exits from recessions,” the president said.
But the PDP, in a statement by its spokesman, Debo Ologunagba, said the realities on the ground did not support Buhari’s claim of good performance.
“The statistics are there, the facts are there for Nigerians to decide. Are we more secure now than in 2015?” Ologunagba queried.
He submitted that Nigerians could not wait to see Buhari leave office next year, urging the President to ensure that the upcoming general elections were credible.
Similarly, the leadership of Labour Party said Buhari gave Nigerians no reason to celebrate on the occasion of the country’s 62nd independence anniversary.
“In practically all and every sector of national governance, the APC has scored zero. Instead, it has been solely records of total failure. In security, zero; education, nought and nothing remarkable recorded in the health sector. It is not necessary to keep naming all because there is just no single sector that hasn’t been recording failure,” the LP said in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Abayomi Arabambi.
Also slamming Buhari’s claim of good performance, the All Progressive Grand Alliance, through its National Chairman, Victor Oye, described the claims as speculative “because what is on the ground doesn’t support the positioning.”
He said Nigerians could only hope that the Buhari regime would make good its promise of “banishing insecurity by December this year.”
The presidential candidate of the African Action Congress, Omoyele Sowore, said Buhari was divorced from Nigeria’s reality.
“I have always said that President Buhari lives in an alternate universe. He doesn’t get it,” the activist said.
Meanwhile, ASUU President, Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke, called on Buhari to write his name in gold by giving education the required funding.
Dismissing the plea made by the President in his speech for university lecturers to call off their months-long strike and return to classes, Osodeke queried: “On what basis do we tell our members to call off the strike? They should set up a committee that they know they trust, and we resolve it.
“We appeal to the President also that as part of his legacy, he should resolve the issues. We appeal that he should do something drastic in education that Nigerians will remember him for.”
CSOs, analysts react
Civil society organisations and public policy analysts, including lawyers, were also unanimous in scoring Buhari low in the delivery of his campaign promises.
A Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Victor Okpara, said, “Nigeria is in a situation where we are in a state of perilous danger economically, physically, educationally and security-wise. It’s not about speeches anymore; it’s about real working the talk.”
A former President of the Committee for the Defence of Human Rights, Malachy Ugwumadu, said none of the promises made by Buhari to Nigerians while canvassing for votes in 2015 had been fulfilled.
He said, “When this government came into power in 2015, they said they would address some things but so far they have not been able to achieve success in even one of them.”
He said in contrast, what Nigerians got were high cost of living, insecurity and deeper level of corruption.
On his part, Lagos-based lawyer, Jiti Ogunye, described Buhari’s Independence Day speech as mere yearly ‘ritual’ that neither held promises nor solution to the problems confronting the nation.
He added that Buhari would be leaving the country worse than he met it.
Chibuzor Opara is an elder brother of the late Claret Opara-Bassey, a Calabar-based lawyer who reportedly died in a crash while chasing her husband who fled when she saw him with his alleged lover on Sunday, September 18. Opara speaks to ALEXANDER OKERE about the tragic incident
Punch
Another lawyer, Liborous Oshoma, said, “He (Buhari) inherited corruption, he is handing over a more corrupt country. He inherited comatose infrastructure, he is giving a more comatose infrastructure.”
Also, the Executive Director of the Advocate for Peoples’ Rights, Mr Victor Giwa, said the President had performed poorly and disappointed many Nigerians.
He said, “Nigeria is one of the most insecure countries in the world, worse than where it was in 2015. So, I wonder why he (Buhari) is saying he has done well. His performance as President would have a ripple effect on how Nigerians would view the APC candidate in the forthcoming elections in 2023.”
The Convener, Civil Coalition for Constitutional Governance, Festus Ogun, said Buhari should apologise to Nigerians for failed promises.
Ogun said, “General Buhari ought to apologise to the people of Nigeria for being a colossal failure, to say the least. He has brought nothing but suffering, pain and anguish upon the good people of this country since he came to power. To say he has done well was an insult on the sensibilities of Nigerians taken too far.”
Also reacting to Buhari’s claim of good performance, Prof Adetanwa Ibironke, said, “With all due respect, he (Buhari) sounded like he didn’t understand the gravity of the damage his government has brought upon Nigerians. I almost cried listening to it him. Many Nigerians are suffering.”
A professor of Economics, Felix Onah, said the Nigerian economy was worse than it was before Buhari came to power.
“The data are there. Check the books. We have never had it this worse,” he stated.
Another economist, Mr Oladayo Ade, noted that it didn’t seem like the President understood what he read to Nigerians about the economy.
“The promise this regime gave was to diversify the economy. To date, the Nigerian economy is solely dependent on oil. Agriculture cannot stand when there is insecurity. How can the farmers go to their farms? I think the President needs to reevaluate his statements moving forward. He knows the truth; he knows Nigerians are suffering. He should show understanding,” he noted.
An economist, Prof. Akpakpan Edet, said, “The government said that the Treasury Single Account has helped in managing resources; how can they say that when we have this allegation that the Accountant General stole so much money using these same devices?”
A security expert, Yemi Adeyemi, said Buhari’s speech lacked depth.
“It was like he did not even live in Nigeria. When he said, ‘I feel your pain’, I didn’t understand him. He goes abroad for even a slight headache and abandons the people he governs. Under his watch, we have had over nine jailbreaks and prison escapes.”