Warts And All, Buhari’s Cabinet Holds Promise

8 Min Read

It is interesting that the unveiling of the list of ministerial nominees has started a new round of controversy in the polity. While quite a large number of Nigerians have hailed the list as containing names of credible persons, who would deliver in any portfolio assigned to them and thus help the president to push the change mantra, quite a large number of others have questioned the composition and thus the president’s wisdom in taking three long months to announce his cabinet members. According to this group, ‘‘where are the angels we have been waiting for in the past three months for which purpose the country had no ministers in place’’?

This writer associates with those Nigerians who are comfortable with the President’s first choice of Cabinet members. Men are not Gods; hence anyone expecting the President to have made better choices than what we currently have been presented with is not being fair. There is no way President Buhari could have arrived at a selection better than what we currently have except Nigerians want him to appoint foreigners as members of his cabinet!

To the question of the delay in making the appointments for which reason the country had to make do without a cabinet for three months, we must understand that anything that is worth doing, is worth doing well and no responsible leader of a nations would embark on any exercise that will ultimately impact on the life and well-being of the populace without careful thought or planning except the latter planned to fail!

It was absolutely necessary that President Buhari took his time to name his cabinet members. This is because of the huge rot in the system when he took over. If a new president took over the way PMB did, and met a situation of long queues at the filling stations, near total lack of electricity across the country in spite of billions of naira in investment in power, huge unemployment and unpaid salary arrears for state and federal workers as well as dilapidating infrastructure in most parts of the country, such a new leader would need to be circumspect.

The situation described above is not edifying nor satisfying for which a new leader like Buhari should jump into the fray and appoint people to merely take over ministerial seats in the tradition of all is well! Nothing was well when Buhari took over and there was the urgent need to understand the problem.

Yet another issue that made the delay inevitable is the need for the president to get grip of the security situation in the country that had spiraled out of control by the time the previous administration was leaving office. We also remember that PMB promised Nigerians to tackle insecurity, insurgency, corruption and to create jobs for the youths. In fairness, no serious leader can tackle corruption and revamp a collapsing national economy in the absence of security or when it has not reasonably dealt with an armed and vicious insurgency that has crippled a large chunk of its country and displaced several thousands of its people!

Therefore the president had to do something concrete about the nation’s poor security situation before bringing attention to bear on other aspects of governance like selecting a cabinet to drive governance and development. Thus, in the last three months, while slowly observing those to be appointed into the cabinet, PMB had been concerned to a large extent with the pressing issues of national security hinged on the Boko Haram insurgency and the threat it poses to the existence and progress of the nation.

Towards this end, in the last three months, Buhari travelled to a number of countries both for security reasons and to re-invigorate bilateral relations to serve better the objectives of national development. Having successfully put the issue of security on a sound pedestal, it is no wonder that the president is now emboldened to turn to constituting his cabinet.

One is comfortable with the list presented by PMB. In fact, it can be said to contain names of people who not only played prominent roles in bringing about the change era, but men and women of caliber, thought and character who will not abandon the task of good governance in pursuit of personal agenda, as has been the case with the former ruling party.

Who would not be assured that the erudite intellectual and lawyer, Alhaji Lai Mohammed would complement the efforts of PMB to make Nigeria a country that works. This is a man who has devoted many years of faithful struggle to remove the then ruling party from power on account of the latter’s many shortcomings. Lai was the active face and voice of the opposition before the 2015 polls.

Or is Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, not good enough for any fair-minded person? This man has been constant like the Northern star. All through the years he remained faithful to the opposition All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) until that party joined forces to midwife the APC that brought us to where we now are. A first class chemical engineer, he would deliver change and progress anywhere he is assigned.

Hajia Aisha Jummai Al-Hassan is a fighter and dogged woman who has a lot of compassion for the downtrodden. She is committed to change and good governance and the development of her people in Taraba State, and Nigeria at large. It is inconceivable that she would derail to become like any of the notorious women who served under the previous Jonathan administration.

Similarly, Rotimi Amaechi, former Rivers State governor would not forget in a hurry the tribulations he went through at the hands of the Jonathan government and how without the determination of Nigerian voters who gave victory to his party, the APC, he would have perhaps been on exile or in detention by now. Amaechi will not abandon change for filthy lucre. The same goes for all other nominees of PMB. Each of them has strong points and are role models in their individual ways.

– Okoroma, a public affairs analyst, contributed this piece from Abuja.

Share this Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.