Northern socio-political groups were on
Friday divided over President Muhammadu Buhari’s appointments, which
have largely been criticised in the south as it has thus far favoured
individuals from the northern part of the country.
Buhari had on Thursday approved the
appointments of six persons including Babachir David Lawal from Adamawa
State as the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and Mr. Abba
Kyari from Borno State as his Chief of Staff.
The list takes the appointments made by
the President so far to 30, with only seven of them coming from the
southern part of the country and the rest from the North.
Socio-cultural
groups and people from the southern region of the country have been
united in their outrage over the appointments, but northerners have been
split over the issue.
For instance, while the Chairman of the
Northern Elders Council, Alhaji Tanko Yakassai, was critical of the
President’s appointments, the convener of the Coalition of Northern
Politicians, Academics, Professionals and Businessmen, Junaid Mohammed,
said he was not in favour of zoning in the giving of political
appointments.
Yakassai, in a telephone interview with
one of our correspondents on Friday, said the President’s appointments
so far showed that he was favouring his section of the country, where he
got the most number of votes.
Yakassai said, “If you look at the
voting pattern, zone by zone, you will see that Buhari is compensating
the zones that favoured him. It depends on the angle from which you look
at it. If you are a patriotic Nigerian, you will see it from the
patriotic angle, if you’re a parochial Nigerian, you will see it as
right.
“We (NEC) are for Nigeria because if you
read the oath of office that Buhari subscribed to as President, he said
he would do justice to all manners of people without fear or favour.
You just judge for yourself whether he has adhered to the content of
that oath of office.”
The former Special Assistant to former
President Shehu Shagari also dismissed insinuations that Buhari was more
concerned about appointing competent persons into offices than making
appointments based on sentiments.
He said, “In Nigeria today, we have
competent people all over the country, no doubt about it. It is a matter
of choice; you can get them from all over the country. We have people
with university education and working experience all over the country.
So, we are not in dire need of competent people because they are
everywhere.”
Mohammed, however, said giving key
political appointments to some certain sections of the country could
endanger the unity of the country.
The second Republic lawmaker also said
that northerners had previously been marginalised in the country by
public office holders of Igbo origin, while denying the existence of a
northern agenda being allegedly pursued by Buhari.
He said, “I’m not and I’ve never been a
believer in zoning or rotation in giving key political appointments. I
also believe that it is not in the national interest to zero in certain
key appointments to certain sections of the country because it allows
for further division of the country.
“Thirdly, I believe that if there had
existed a so-called northern agenda, I would know about it because I’m
smart. I don’t believe that any Nigerian whether Buhari, Olusegun
Obasanjo (former President) or anybody could hoodwink 170 million
people. And if that agenda existed, certainly, Nigerians would know and
knowing Nigerians for who they are, they would kick against it.
“So the talk of a northern agenda or a
Buhari’s agenda which is pro-north is utter nonsense. If there is a
perceived lopsidedness in any appointments, the political situation must
be looked at closely to ensure that justice is done.
“But in this, you also don’t look at
immediate appointments; you look at previous appointments made over the
last 16 years where a particular section of the country was deliberately
marginalised.
“There was a policy of disenfranchising
the north, marginalising the north and especially among Ibo political
appointees, there has been a deliberate attempt to go out of their way
to offend, disgrace and undermine northern political interest. When some
of us were talking about this, I don’t remember a single Igbo voice
supporting us, and most people in the south did not say anything.”
Mohammed, who said he did not know
Buhari’s motive for making the appointments, however, added that he knew
the President as someone who would place meritocracy above sentiments.
He said, “I don’t know what Buhari’s
intentions are but one thing I know from his track record of over 45
years is that Buhari has never been caught making appointments on the
basis of primordial sentiments.
“Those who were in the army would
testify and those with who he worked as governor and in the Ministry of
Petroleum Resources and the committees he headed as a serving officer.
Nobody can come out to say Buhari showed primordial, religious or any
other sentiments other than merit sentiments which are the most
important on his mind.”
Meanwhile, the Chairman of the
pan-Northern socio-political group, Arewa Consultative Forum, Alhaji
Ibrahim Coomasie, called for patience over the appointments so far made
by Buhari.
Coomasie described the condemnation that has trailed the appointments as uncalled for as “other appointments have yet to come.”
He also debunked insinuations that the
President was executing a northern agenda, saying, “it is too early to
judge the president. Let us wait and see other appointments.
“We still have other appointments like
ministers, parastatals and boards that have yet to come. Let us wait
before judging him. It is too early to do so.”
But on the contrary, the President of
the group’s youth wing, Arewa Youths Consultative Forum, Yerima
Shettima, who spoke to a newspaper (not Saturday PUNCH), described the situation as worrisome.
He said, “It is unfortunate the way the
situation is, because one becomes worried. We must be seen to be
nationalistic than being sectionalised.
“I am beginning to feel uncomfortable
because the complaint is that the appointments are seen to be lopsided. I
also do not think that is the intention of the government.”
In the south, however, Buhari’s appointments have been described as lopsided and sectionalised.
A leader of the Yoruba socio-cultural
group, Afenifere, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, described Buhari’s appointments as
worrisome, saying he was particularly worried that the latest
appointments had not reflected the yearning of Nigerians.
Adebanjo said, “I am getting worried
now; the whole thing is getting me worried. I want to see the clearer
picture of what the President is planning to do. The step the President
has taken in his latest appointments is worrisome.
“I want to see how the President will
form his cabinet in September. What he has just done concerning the
appointments of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and
others are a source of concern to me.”
Also, the National Publicity Secretary
of Afenifere, Mr. Yinka Odumakin, said Buhari’s appointments would give
him the identity of a sectional leader.
He said the President “may unwittingly
be acting out the 97 per cent versus five per cent Freudian slip in
Washington by concentrating most of his strategic appointments in his
corner of the country.
“That may cast him in the mould of a
sectional leader who is not seeing the whole country as his
constituency. The “we” versus “them” which this pattern suggests can
only further polarise a badly divided country which the map of the last
election presented. What is required at the moment is leadership that is
able to rise above the frays and bring all sections on board.”
Igbo socio- cultural organisation,
Ohanaeze Youth Council, also lambasted the President, describing him as
“an unrepentant tribalist and anti-Igbo.”
In a statement signed by the group’s
National President, Mazi Okechukwu Isiguzoro, and Public Relations
Officer, Obinna Adibe, Ohanaeze accused Buhari of deliberately excluding
the South-East from all the political appointments he had made so far.
The statement read in part: “We stand to
condemn this glaring hatred for Ndigbo by the administration of
President Muhammadu Buhari. We recall that apart from several other
appointments, Buhari’s government has also appointed Service Chiefs and
in a similar manner, he sidelined the South-East zone.
“As if that was not enough, the
long-awaited position of the Secretary to the Government of the
Federation has come at last and this government deemed nobody from the
South-East qualified enough to occupy that position, which was earlier
zoned to Ndigbo.
“Where is the justice; where is the equity; where is the one Nigeria? How long will Ndigbo be pushed to the walls?
“Tribalism has never paid Nigeria and this period will not make any difference”.
In his reaction, National Chairman of
the Labour Party, Alhaji Abdulkadir Abdulsalami, described the
appointments as “unacceptable.”
He said, “The President didn’t take
certain things into consideration. The appointments are not accepted to
LP. If this is the All Progressives Congress’ concept of change, it is
very unfortunate. The APC knows what to do. If at the end of the day,
the party decides to toy with the likes of Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu (APC
chieftain from the South-East), despite the commitment and sacrifice he
has made for the party, it shows their chameleonic dynamics.”
A Lagos-based lawyer, Mr. Fred Agbaje,
however, noted that lopsided appointments have become, “a common
phenomenon” in the current administration, describing them as a “clear
violation of the principle of federal character and the need to promote
national unity and hegemony as enshrined in the preamble of the
Constitution.”
A legal practitioner and Executive
Director of Egalitarian Mission Africa, Mr. Kayode Ajulo, who also
reacted to Buhari’s recent appointments, accused him of “treating the
nation like an occupied territory.”
Ajulo in a statement obtained by
Saturday PUNCH, described the development as “scary and ominous”, adding
that it gives an “insight into the manner of things to be expected from
this administration.”
The appointments were also greeted by
angry reactions on social media, where many Nigerians were openly
critical of the President.
For instance, many of the comments on the website of The PUNCH newspaper also condemned President Buhari’s appointments.
A reader identified on the website as
Rotimi Lawanson, said, “He has handed the entire security structure,
justice system and core appointments to the North and that is extremely
dangerous.”
Another reader identified as Glogab
said, “Common sense demands that he should consider the feelings of
other regions of the country. He is the President of Nigeria and not
(that of) Northern region. He should be experienced enough to learn from
history.”
A former Minister of Aviation, Femi
Fani-Kayode, who also posted on his Facebook page, listed all the
appointments so far made by the President, adding that, “Nigerians
wanted ‘change’ and now we have got it. No one should complain because
this is what our people wanted. Those of us who warned the country that
this would happen were insulted and lampooned. Now, we have to live with
the consequences of our choice for the next four years. Welcome to the
new Nigeria. Welcome to ‘Change’.”
Also, Ross Alaba-George described the
appointments as an assassination of federal character, saying, “Buhari
just showed Nigeria how resource control should be done. When you have
power, take it; if you have resources take it…Federal Character
Assassination.”
A commentator on Nairaland, identified
simply as Erunz, queried if Northerners were more competent than people
from other regions of the country, adding that, “No one should complain
because when we wailed, they told us Buhari’s appointment is based on
competence. So, the northerners are more competent. No one should cry,
especially my people from the South-West.”
Also, Sincere9gerian said, “It is only
people who have sold their souls to the devil that will overlook
Buhari’s tribal bigotry and dictatorial tendencies. His actions are
simply indefensible. At this point, the few Southerners that have been
appointed so far should resign immediately.”
Meanwhile, Buhari, Chief of Staff and
Federal Character have respectively been trending on Twitter since the
announcement was made.
On Twitter, Ajebomarket.com chided the
appointment of Kyari as the Chief of Staff to the President, saying,
“Abba Kyari is the new Chief of Staff to Buhari. He’s just 77 years old,
but forget his age. He’s more competent than others since he’s Hausa.”
Tamapeta tweeted, “It’s very
undemocratic to do away with Federal Character in a bid to cover up
these appointments. Federal Character is very important.”
Interestingly, some prominent Buhari’s supporters have also joined his critics to condemn his appointments.
A columnist, Farooq Kperogi, in a post on his Facebook page, questioned the advices the President has been receiving lately.
He said, “Who is advising President
Buhari? The undisguised ‘Arewacentricity’ of his appointments is frankly
assuming disturbing dimensions. He is carrying on as if other parts of
the country don’t matter. Many non-northerners, who have as much stake
in the country and in Buhari’s success as anybody else, are justifiably
disillusioned.
“A president who ran for election on the
mantra of “change” can’t continue the tradition of invidiously clannish
appointments and expect to continue to enjoy national goodwill.”
Another of Buhari’s supporters, who is
also a columnist, Bamidele Ademola-Olateju, agreed with Kperogi on her
Facebook page, saying that people should stop accusing them of
criticising because they were not appointed.
She said, “Sorry, I will be Buhari’s
harshest critic when he steps out of line or assumes a narrow focus. We
will prevent him from falling into the stereotypes that prevented him
from winning prior to 2015.”

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