The current Nigerian President, Mohammad Buhari, was born on 17 December 1942 in Daura, Katsina State. He had his early education in Katsina, then went to Kaduna for military training and later Sandhurst in Great Britain, India, and the United States.
The former army major-general and military head of state between 1984 and 1985, has now been twice elected as Nigeria’s leader in 2015 and 2019.
Unlike many of his predecessors, Buhari usually marks his birthday quietly. Many Nigerians began tweeting and wishing the President happy birthday wishes this early morning.
TNC’s open question to fellow Nigerians is:-what do you wish Buhari as he marks his 77th birthday? Femi Adeshina, the special adviser on media and publicity to President Muhammadu, wrote this essay on why he remains a ‘Buharist.’ The article says-
PMB at 77: ‘Please tell Baba we are with him all the way’
By FEMI ADESINA
I boarded a commercial airliner heading to Lagos from Abuja. I was
already seated, and strapping my seat belt, when a young man approached
me. He must have been in his late 20s, or at most, early 30s. I shook
hands, greeted him warmly, and he slipped something in my palm. He went
back to his seat.
It was a piece of paper, and on it was written: “Please, tell Baba we are with him all the way.”
My eyes became misty. I knew who he was talking about. My principal and
Baba of the country, President Muhammadu Buhari, who turns 77 today.
“Please, tell Baba we are with him all the way.” What a message! What confidence! What love! And what reassurance.
At times, if you listen to the Babel of voices in the country,
particularly on social media and some critical segment of the
traditional media, you think everything is all wrong with the land. You
think it’s all sorrow tears and blood, the regular trade mark of failed
or failing countries.
The biblical prophet, Elijah, felt at a time
that he was the only true prophet of God left in Israel. And he
complained to God: they have all followed Baal, the strange god. I am
the only one left with you.
But God gave him a tutorial: you only
think so. I have for me in this land 7,000 other prophets, who have not
bowed the knees to Baal.
That was what happened in that aircraft.
The young man who slipped the note into my hand is like millions upon
millions of quiet Nigerians, “who have not bowed the knees to Baal.”
People who love President Muhammadu Buhari, who appreciate that he is
here for such a time as this, and who believe that he is leading us to a
new Nigeria, a land flowing with milk and honey. I believe. I am in the
number of millions of people, who daily wish Buhari well, and pray that
he will lead the land to fair havens, halcyon shores, before 2023.
If all the information you consume is from social media, and the
critical segment of the traditional media, you will likely miss the
correct pulse of the country. Let me share an experience here.
Some
months before the 2019 general elections, I ran into Governor Nasir
El-Rufai in the Presidential Villa, as he was going in to see the
President. We greeted warmly, and I asked if he could please stop by in
my office on the way out. He promised to do so.
What was my worry?
The trend on social media, as to how the elections would go. I had a
broader view of the reality, but I needed some reassurance. And I knew
El-Rufai was analytical, and constantly had statistics at his
fingertips. He’s not a first class quantity surveyor for nothing.
The governor turned up. I unfolded my worries, and asked for his
opinion. He merely opened his laptop computer, and shared the result of a
scientific research with me.
What did the research say? With large
sample size from across the country, and painstaking state by state
analysis, it stated that President Buhari was going to beat his closest
opponent by millions of votes. And wait for this: the social media would
account for just between nine and 11 percent of the votes. And wait
again: that percentage would not go to one party alone. It would be
shared between the two leading political parties, the All Progressives
Congress (APC), and the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). It turned quite
prophetic.
The young man in the plane is among the millions of
Nigerians who tilted the scale. They know that Nigeria is not where she
should be, not yet, but it is not business as usual. There is one man
who is laboring hard to turn the country right side up. He is Muhammadu
Buhari, and the journey may be tedious, arduous and slow, but we are
headed in the right direction.
Friends, Nigerians, countrymen. Yes, I
have come to celebrate Muhammadu Buhari, as he turns 77 today. See the
sycophant, the fanatic, some people would say. But do I mind them? I
don’t. I have chosen my own hero, let them choose theirs. As we say in
local parlance, ‘say your prayers, and let me say amen. No quarrel for
church.’
I have said it before, and I say it again. I have followed
Buhari since he was a military ruler, when I was an undergraduate, and
if that regime had lasted for longer, Nigeria would not be in the
doldrums that she found herself. It was a tough administration, but
which was leading us on the right path. Till forces of reaction struck,
and we were back to worse than square one.
You could imagine my joy
when Buhari eventually emerged civilian President after 12 years of
struggle. I didn’t think I was going to ever serve in government, but I
found myself in it. Just because it was Buhari. More than four years
down the line, have I changed my mind? No. Is it a perfect government?
There’s none anywhere. But I still remain a Buharist, just like millions
of other Nigerians.
I know many people who started with us in the
Buhari camp, but who are now on the other side. Some were were lured
away by the garlic, cucumber, onions and leeks of Egypt, while some
others jumped ship because of the color of the currency they saw. Some
others, who expected quick fixes, are now singing the Lord’s song in a
strange land. Some others are vacillating between many opinions. But for
some of us, it is the immortal words of Sir Walter Scott: “Other
people’s resolutions may fluctuate on the wild and changeful billows of
human opinions. Our’s, now and forever, are anchored on the rock of
ages.”
Why are we dyed-in-the-wool Buharists? Is he a perfect,
infallible man? Show me who is. So, why do we remain resolute,
irrespective of what people on the other side see as foibles and
failings of the administration? Many reasons.
Buhari is not a thief.
Can you say the same of many past leaders in this country? No, you
can’t. I’m not saying they’ve all been light fingered, but we know those
who served us honestly, and those who stole the living daylights out of
the country. They and their confederates.
When I then see a honest
man, the Mai Gaskiya, should I not follow him? Should I not trek from
here to China for his sake? I would even trek further from Beijing to
Yokohama. Larceny and plunder have been bane of our country. That was
why we were consigned in gross backwardness and underdevelopment. Now
that I see a man who has come to make a difference, I choose to stand by
him all the way.
We know people who were worth only thousands when
they got into leadership positions in this country. But they came out in
obscene wealth. In other words, they went not to serve the country, but
themselves. And here is Muhammadu Buhari, a man who wants nothing from
Nigeria, but who has come to empty himself in the service of the
country. And some people say we are fanatical supporters? Yes, for the
sake of our country. For the future of our children. For the good of
ordinary people, we are Buharists.
Simplicity. President Buhari is a
Muslim, a good one, and I am a Christian, trying daily to be a good
one. I see him at close quarters. At home, in the office, in the
country, out of it. What a simple man. He holds power with simplicity.
He eats simply. Wears the most modest things. No swashbuckling, no
ostentation. And when we talk privately, I love when he indicates that
he’s in a temporal position, which he wants to use for the good of the
larger majority of Nigerians. That’s why I’m a Buharist, and no
apologies.
Abhorrence of corruption. I said it before. President
Buhari is not a thief, and he cannot vouch for you if you are tarred
with the brush of corruption. You will simply be on your own. There is
the jaded talk of the anti-corruption war in the land being selective.
Well, those who say that are merely operating from a mindset. No matter
who you are, however close you can be to him, when it comes to
corruption, this President speaks up for no one. That is why the
anti-corruption agencies are making conquests. He tele-guides them in no
way.
An eye on history. That’s where the President keenly focuses.
He wants to be positively remembered as a man who came, who saw, and
made a difference. That’s why the country is one big construction site.
Roads, rail, airports, power, water projects, and many others. Nigeria
must get a new lease of life, and history must record it that the
revolution started under one man: Muhammadu Buhari.
A kind man.
Don’t mind the names you hear. Tyrant. Iron fist. Military ruler.
Violator of rule of law. Major General (as if he’s not one). And many
others. But you know what? This President is a kind man.
In 2015,
some months into office, a proposal was thrown up at a meeting. The
civil service was unwieldy, the economy was down, and salaries were
being paid through the noses. It may well be time to cut the civil
service strength by half, since most of them were even idle.
But the
idea didn’t sell. The President said if he had his way, not a single
civil servant would be sent home due to rationalization. Things were
tough enough for them, not to add loss of jobs. And so it happened.
When labor unions came some years later to agitate for higher pay, the
President first balked. He said it was not sustainable, which was the
truth. But eventually, he buckled, due to a kind heart, and new wages
are being paid at serious cost to government.
Let me say this, with
the presumed permission of the President. He kept the Service Chiefs he
inherited in 2015 for a couple of months. And when it was time to let
them go, he sent for me one afternoon. He gave me the names of the new
appointees, and told me not to announce till the next day.
“I have
informed the outgoing Service Chiefs some minutes ago. But I don’t want
their families to hear the news over radio or television. I want them to
get home, and break the news themselves,” the President said.
I
told him we would not be able to keep the news under wraps till the next
day, that it should rather be announced immediately. He looked at me,
laughed, and said: “You have not been sacked before. That’s why you are
talking that way. Me, I’ve been sacked from office before, and I know
how it feels.” We laughed.
When the chief executive of a major
corporation was also going to be replaced, he gave me the new name, and
said I should not announce for an hour or two, so that the outgoing man
would have received his letter, and not hear it from the media.
Many
acts of kindness have I seen the President shown to many, and also to
me, yet some people want to call him strange names. And I should believe
it? I hear!
On this auspicious day, I celebrate our President.
Cynics and scoffers would say why won’t you applaud him since you are
part of the largesse of office. Yes, I hold office under the President,
but I am yet to see the largesse. Maybe tomorrow. Or day after. And
whether in government or out of it, count me among those who believe.
I am a Buharist. So are also millions of Nigerians. We thank God for
bringing him our way. May his strength be renewed daily. He’s our
miracle man, whom nobody could have predicted two years ago would still
be with us today. We love him because he first loved us, and is serving
us with all that is in him. Like that young man in the aircraft,
“Please, tell Baba we are with him all the way.”
.Adesina is Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to President Buhari