Ministers, loyalists, fellow countrymen, By Owei Lakemfa

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#TrackNigeria: Fellow Countrymen and women, People of my country. I have not come to criticize the wise decision of  President Muhammadu Buhari, to appoint only those he personally knows, as Ministers.

Tears trickled down my face, and  I am sure from the faces of all   patriots when at his  maiden 2019  meeting with the leadership of the National Assembly President Buhari lamented: “(In)  the last cabinet which I headed, most of them, majority of them, I didn’t know them. I had to accept the names and recommendations from the party and other individuals. I worked with them for three and half years at least—meeting twice or two weeks in a month. So I didn’t know them.” No wonder the government largely failed to meet the expectations of Nigerians.

I personally propose that the National Assembly should move a joint motion on behalf of the Nigerian people praising Buhari  for enduring such a nightmare and being unable to change even ministers whose integrity, were called to question.  He deserves medals for his stoic resignation to work with strangers whom he was   unable to reshuffle   even when it became clear that some were non-performers.

I think kudos should also go to the First Lady, Aisha Buhari, who first alerted Nigerians that her husband  was working with total strangers. In October, 2016, she told the British Broadcasting Corporation that: “The President does not know 45 out of 50, for example, of the people he appointed and I don’t know them either, despite being his wife of 27 years. Some people were sitting down in their homes folding their arms only for them to be called to come and head an agency or a ministerial position.”

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Her Excellency who also claimed that her husband’s administration had been hijacked by “a few men”   threatened that: “if things continue like this up to 2019, I will not go out and campaign again and ask any woman to vote like I did before. I will never do it again.”

At that time, the President was on a visit to Germany, and was actually standing next to German Chancellor Angela Merkel when the imprudent press asked him his response to his wife’s clearly embarrassing statement. As a macho African man ‘wey no dey carry last’ Buhari had given a memorable answer:  “I don’t know which party my wife belongs to, but she belongs to my kitchen and my living room and the other room.” His guest, Merkel looked   embarrassed; that in the 21st century, women still belong to the kitchen and the bedroom. Also,   his answer carried a riddle that remains unraveled; what is “the other room”?

But all that belong to the past as Her Excellency vigorously campaigned for the re-election of her husband.

In his German response, Buhari  had claimed that having run for president three times and  succeeded at the fourth attempt, he could “claim superior knowledge over her” But today, his thought concurs with hers.

 To correct the past, President Buhari  told the legislators: “But this time around I’m going to be quite me – me in the sense that I will pick people I personally know.” Who but the unpatriotic can fault such received wisdom driven by experience? My only observation is that it is a right decision in   a wrong context.  In the African village setting, everybody knew themselves, and even if nobody knew you, the elders would  know your family   history. So the problem with the President’s decision, is that Nigeria is not a village, and in a country with an estimated 200 million people, it is impossible for him to know personally, up to 5 percent of the populace; that is 10 million Nigerians. It means that at least 95 percent of Nigerians will be strangers to him.  This  translates to  millions of  Nigerian adults who are strangers to Buhari, being  screened out, yet our constitution says that there shall be no discrimination against any Nigerian for whatever reason.   

The other problem is that the President’s wise decision to appoint only those he personally knows as Ministers, is what is called nepotism. As  you   know, nepotism shares affinity with cronyism. In this case, a basic criterion that must be met in order to be appointed a Minister is not competence, knowledge or skill, but having  some  affinity with the President maybe from his village, childhood, days in the military, years as military governor, minister, military Head of State or as President. Political scientists will also characterize this  as prebendalism.

That President Buhari appoints Ministers only amongst  those he knows, is no guarantee that they will be competent. Some may be living on past glories. It is like an old football coach deciding to choose his team only from amongst players he knows; some might be suffering from injuries, some may not be in form, some might be past their playing days. So, a  good coach should always lookout for young, undiscovered talents and blend them with older players whom he might not even have known.

Even if President Buhari picks Ministers  only from those he knows, there is no guarantee that they will be suitable. If for instance, he knows a competent carpenter in Daura and appoints him the Minister of Health; it might be putting a square peg in a round hole. It will be like adding zero plus zero and expecting the answer to be two.

If he reflects deeply, he might discover that the  problem was not in appointing strangers into his last cabinet, but partly being hoodwinked to believe that lawyers as “tested nobles” are jack of all trades and master of all.  Hence he populated his cabinet with lawyers; ten out of 36 including the  Ministers of  Foreign Affairs, Communication, Information, Sports, Labour, Women, Petroleum, Justice, Planning, Works, Housing and Power.

He might also find that the Ministers were not given a free hand to operate as  was obvious in the Health Ministry where the Minister could not discipline or cause to be disciplined, the head of a health  agency indicted for fraud. 

For me, the most fundamental issue  in this matter is the wrong impression   created  that  Ministers are personal aides of the President.  Rather, constitutionally, they are  chief public servants charged with being the eyes and ears of the people and  responsible,  along with the President and Vice President, in  determining the general direction of domestic and foreign policies in the country, and,  running  government. Also, Ministers have powers to cause an examination of  the President  to determine if   he is  fit to continue  in  office. So what the constitution dictates are competent and knowledgeable patriots    as Ministers not friends and cronies of the President. Such patriotic men and women can be sourced from anywhere including the diaspora.

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