Nothing good comes so easy. One has to fight for it but in his case, he alleged
a brazen act of impunity, reproach and extreme judicial subterfuge.
For 12 consecutive years, he was denied victory. He was jeered at. He
was written off. He was defeated(?) But he soldiered on. Obviously one
thing worked for him: Resilience. Today, it has paid off and in 19 days
time, he would be sworn in as the president of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria.
Indeed, anyone who listened or watched General Mohammadu Buhari, on
Wednesday in Abuja, tell the story of his many failed attempts at
winning would walk away with one impression: that one does not give up
on one’s convictions no matter the circumstances.
Former Head of State between 1983 and 1985, Buhari exited from
partisan politics afterwards. But in 2003, he staged a full re-launch,
vying for the presidency of Nigeria.
First, he ran on the platform of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples
Party, ANPP, against the then President Olusegun Obasanjo. He also faced
late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua in 2007 presidential election but
lost. Later 2010, he formed the defunct Congress for Progressive Change,
CPC. On that platform, he contested in 2011 but also lost to outgoing
President Goodluck Jonathan of the People’s Democratic Party, PDP.
By the middle of 2013, Buhari’s party, CPC, joined forces with three
others to form the All Progressives Congress, APC. He contested on
this new platform and won the March 28, 2015, presidential election.
Faced with similar daunting electoral challenge, the APC’s
gubernatorial candidates of Taraba and Akwa Ibom in the last April 11
governorship polls, Mrs. Aisha Alhassan and Mr. Umana Umana within the
week besieged Buhari’s house in Abuja, crying to him about the charade
of an election they had in their respective states, informing him of
their separate resolve to contest the outcome of the elections at the
Election Petitions Tribunal.
But unknown to them, they provoked Buhari, reminding him of his own
experience and the endless legal voyage that followed suit. And as
expected, the now president-elect told his story, first to Alhassan on
Wednesday and Umana on Thursday.
According to him, his journey from the tribunals down to the Supreme
Court was an indication of his firm belief in the tenets of democracy.
Hear him: “It is a battle well fought and I am very pleased that you
have taken the honourable way. According to the Nigerian constitution,
you may go to court. I was there three times and ended up in the Supreme
Court. Sometimes, people wonder why I tried so hard. I tried so hard
because it is a system I believe in. I believe that multi party
democratic system is the best form of governance with a big caveat that
election must be free and fair.
“Really, this is why I am in it. I was in APP. I joined partisan
politics in April 2002 and on that date, at my ward, I said that those
who knew me, and myself, following my career and antecedents in the
military, if I tell people that I will participate in partisan politics,
people would not believe it and I will not also believe it. But I found
myself in it and I never turned back.
“Within one year, APP gave me the ticket. There were governors,
senators and much older people than me, but all the same, I got the
ticket. I lost; I was in court for 30 months. In 2007, we tried to have a
limited merger and became ANPP and again, I participated and was told I
lost.
“I went to court for 20 months up to the Supreme Court and I felt
that my party was not fair to me. While I was in court, the leadership
of the party proceeded and took two marginal ministries in late
Yar’Adua’s cabinet and an Adviser. For that disgraceful behavior by the
party leadership, I left the party and we floated the CPC.
“Again, I attempted in 2011 and lost and again, I was in court for
about eight months and I contested now for the fourth time on APC’s
platform having successfully gone through with the merger of the three
legacy parties.
“So, Aisha, don’t give up. You are younger and this is your first
attempt. I contested three times and this is my fourth attempt. I hope
that you succeed in the court. I am impressed by the quality of Taraba
people you brought here.”
2015 elections, a landmark
Were it not for the advent of the technology of card reader and the
unprecedented expression of desire for change from the status quo by the
Nigerian people, Buhari said that the election that made him the winner
would have also followed the ways of the previous ones.
“I think that 2015 will go down in Nigeria’s political history as a
glorious year. Nigerians have deliberately understood what is multi
party democracy. But we thank God for technology – PVC and card reader.
If not this luck we had with technology and the insistence of
constituencies to make sure they are used, in two geopolitical zones
where they were subverted, the people wanted to vote, but they were not
allowed to vote.
“They continued with what they used to do in their party offices or
their sitting rooms, write the results, go to radio house and television
house and announce the result and say whoever does not want the result
should go to court.
“How many people can go to court when they are struggling to get the
next day’s meal? Where will they get the millions to give to those
Senior Advocates of Nigeria? I was able to do it because of the goodwill
of Nigeria which again demonstrated itself this year.
“People agreed that I am not a very rich man, but I was lucky that
Nigerians believed in me and they put their strength together, voted and
made sure that their votes counted. I say thanks to the technology.
Please continue to support those among you that you feel will go and
work for your state and for the country. I assure you that the
government of the APC, when eventually put in place will be a competent
Nigerian government.
“We will never betray the people because they have risked everything.
Some even lost their lives in this course to make sure that APC
succeeded and that we have a leadership in place that they can trust is
what multi party democracy is all about,” he said.
‘How I became a born-again democrat’
Buhari, a retired Major-General in the Nigerian Army also gave an insight on his conviction to become a true democrat.
“I will tell you what made me a multi party democrat. In 1991, after
coming out of detention, I was sitting at home and the Soviet Union
collapsed. They were the world power fighting the western world. They
had more sophisticated weapons, but something happened.
“There was confusion and everybody went away. Today, there’re 18
countries in the former Soviet Union. That was when I believed that
multi party democratic system is a superior form of governance and that
is why I joined democracy”, he said.
I am in politics to fight corruption, insecurity and unemployment
Religious intolerance and tribal sentiments are not the worst enemies
of Nigeria. The common enemy is corruption. And Buhari demonstrated
this in the story of how Supreme Court Justices that presided over his
case got sharply divided. He, perhaps, had thought that his Fulani
brothers would have sided with him but no. It was others who showed
courage and reasoning.
Now, for a man who has suffered from several electoral and judicial
strokes with little or no financial muzzle to meet the expectations of
SANs or their Lordships, reforming the electoral process, and fighting
corruption should be his priority once he assumes office. And this is
what Buhari promised the Akwa Ibom delegation on Thursday.
“Now the records are very clear. Anybody who wants to study the
political development of Nigeria cannot do without getting the Supreme
Court’s judgments of those years, 2003, 2007 and 2011. If you could
recall in 2007, the Supreme Court was split into two. Six panel of
justices were divided. Six justices led by Justice Oguntade, a
Christian, a Yoruba man, Justice Aloma Mukthar, I think she’s a muslin
but a Yoruba woman and another justice from Delta State said that
election of 2007 was null and void because it was not conducted
according to law.
“But the former Chief Justice, Mustapha, a Fulani Man from Jigawa and
another Justice from Taraba, also a Fulani Man said well, the election
was not flawless but all the same PDP has won and then the Chief
Justice, a Muslim, cancelled the votes with them so it was four against
three. So the point I want to make here is that the problem of Nigeria
is not ethnic or religious. You know what it is.
“This is what we are fighting, that is why corruption is number three
in my campaign. The first one is security, the north east, the delta
areas where people are kidnapped and ransom is demanded which people
cannot afford. The second one is unemployment, sixty percent of
Nigerians are youths, most of them, whether they went to school or not
are unemployed and that is dangerous.
“So we have to get the issue of the economy right to make sure the
jobs are made available and we should try to kill corruption before
corruption kills Nigeria. Let us practice what we preach as well.
Whoever wins as a governor too has a lot of work to do because
corruption is fast becoming a culture and to try to caution people is
not an easy task but it must be done. I know you all represent various
constituencies, please pass our message and give them hope that we’ll do
our best in the interest of all. I wish sincerely those that are going
to tribunal the best of luck.
“We have made a big stride this year and I assure you God willing, if
we survive the next four years, Nigerians will be in a position to
confidently raise their heads up and elect their own representatives and
leaders.
“They will choose those they want as their representatives from local
government, states and to the centre. I will fight for free, fair and
credible election because that is why I remained in politics. I thank
you very much for the sacrifices you have made to make sure we
succeeded”, he said.
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