culled from DAILY TRUST, November 7, 2006
It is amazing how some Nigerians arrogate to themselves the power of the almighty complete with the ability to foretell and control the future. Yet how deluded, short-sighted and downright ignorant they turn out to be, for the simple and highly clichéd reason that “no one knows tomorrow.
No one, that is, except one faceless writer, Jide Ayobolu whose
crass writing defiled the prized pages of the highly-rated Daily
Trust of Friday, November 3rd, 2006 (
http://www.dawodu.com/ayobolu7.htm ). He set out in the
doggerel he penned to announce that he has been to God’s throne
to find out that the minister of the Federal Capital Territory;
Nasiru el-Rufai, will never become president. He tried to be a
poor imitation of the real political seers in our society whose
views are respected.
Jide, if he exists, must be fronting for the sacred cows not
spared by the el-Rufai revolution. It is a manifest fact that
the people mostly affected by the demolitions are the high and
mighty who till recently got away with their impunity, erecting
structures on sewage and buying up lands indiscriminately. These
aggrieved fellas have targeted the minister for their hate and
use every opportunity to heckle him. But to the minister’s
credit, he has soldiered on without fear and continues to build
up the FCT to resemble other great capitals of the world. Today,
Abuja is playing host to thousands of tourists who have come to
rate the city high in terms of its beauty and serenity.
In case you, dear reader, have not seen it, Jide’s write-up is
everything but accurate. He stood logic on its head by
mischievously raking up all sorts of inanities as the reasons
for disqualifying el- Rufai. I would have allowed this imaginary
Jide his right to sound off his frustration if I thought he said
something worth hearing. He would have won me over to his side
if he had advanced intelligent points and superior arguments on
why he thinks the minister should not be his president. If he
had raised researched debates on the performance of el-Rufai and
the question of ability to deliver, I wouldn’t join issues with
him.
But Jide merely appealed to primordial sentiments, talking about
the victims of demolition as if el-Rufai is a heartless soul who
gets a kick from watching destitute on the streets. If that was
the writer’s objective to demonise the man, then he has failed
because Nigerians by nature have a way of seeing through such
puerile tactics. For somewhere in the sub-consciousness of
Nigerians, they commend what el-Rufai is doing in Abuja. There
are many people who feel the minister has had the courage and
political will that his predecessors lacked in tackling the
decay in Abuja. They secretly admire him for his pursuit of
excellence and are proud that the city is gradually emerging as
a first-class capital of an African country. That is leadership.
Inside them also, many Nigerians are willing to give el- Rufai a
chance at sanitising the society. For beyond the demolitions
lies the courage, strength of character, astuteness of a man
willing to bear the pains that come with negative branding.
Leading a nation is the job of people interested in pleasing
everyone. Like Chairman Mao of the Chinese revolution, true
leaders know they cannot make omelettes without breaking eggs.
That is the burden of leadership. It takes a real man to do what
el-Rufai is doing at the FCT. In the past, it would have been
business as usual. Abuja was fast turning into a glorified dump
site before el-Rufai came around.
What about the horrible living conditions of the suburbs?
Nigerians when left alone can be lawless and as a people we just
don’t like to be asked to stay the course of discipline. And so,
rules and standards are alien words to most of us. Take the seat
belt thing, for instance. It took the persuasion of the road
safety people to enforce it and even then with only small
success. We hate to do the right thing. el-Rufai is thus a
symbol of enforcing the right thing and I dare say that is what
this country needs. The nation needs a surgeon who is not afraid
of using the scalpel to root out a germ.
We need someone who can harness the human resources of this
country and check its decay. We must have a president whose
words are his bond and the FCT minister has demonstrated he
knows how to keep his words. He showed it in his resilience and
determination to change the FCT. You can accuse the minister of
being overzealous but there is work to be done. Nigeria cannot
advance without the energy and radical dynamism of men such as
el-Rufai who has broken off from the tradition of tardiness.
Just as he halted the drift into the disintegration of the FCT,
I believe strongly that the minister can extend that to the
whole of the country. There is need for Nigerians to go back to
the drawing boards and begin to implement the master plan
envisioned by our founding fathers at independence. Only a
visionary, articulate, mission-oriented, passionate and selfless
person can do that. el-Rufai in the past years has shown he is
not the everyday Nigerian: the typical corrupt and self-centred
person.
In 2007, God must give us someone who can rally the nation and
force it into glory. We need men of steel like el- Rufai and
Nuhu Ribadu who, though young, are determined to make this
nation proud. They are the new faces of hope, the glad noises of
a rescue van and the types of leadership that will catapult
Nigeria to the Promised Land.
This country cannot afford to go back and some of the
presidential aspirants today are the same cancerous elements who
led this nation astray. These are men without conscience whose
understanding of democracy is to eat up everything in the
treasury. Politics for them is an avenue to grab what remains of
the nation’s till and walk tall among their people in flowing
agbada, while starved folks chant “ranka dede” at them. But this
will never happen again. Nigeria is on the move and no one can
stop it.
Jide also spoke of the bribery scandal when el-Rufai was to be
made a minister. So what about it? Is el-Rufai not vindicated
concerning Ibrahim Mantu? Were Nigerians not amazed at the
amount of filth surrounding the deputy Senate president during
the third term debacle? Who would you rather believe today
between a Mantu and an el-Rufai? In any case, does it not show
strength of character to come out and expose evil? Was it not
equally a rare demonstration of humility for the FCT minister to
apologise to the senators when he told them the truth?
The next president of this country must combine most of the
attributes of el-Rufai, and like I outlined, the person must be
resolute, determined, result-oriented, cosmopolitan, intelligent
and sound in his calling. It is astonishing that Jide, the
armchair critic, cannot recognise these qualities in the FCT
minister. But then again, it takes the third eye to see such
things. Alas, Jide only sees in the natural.
Lawan wrote from House No. 14, Badarawa, Kaduna, Kaduna
State.