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As Buhari Arrives Washington, DC

By Sonala Olumhense
19 July 2015   |   2:05 pm
NIGERIA’s President Muhammadu Buhari began his mission of change in earnest last week by appointing new chiefs for the security services. It was not the appointments in themselves that were significant, but this statement he made to them: “All of you…were chosen on merit. Your records gave you the job. Save for the new Chief…

Caleb OlumhenseNIGERIA’s President Muhammadu Buhari began his mission of change in earnest last week by appointing new chiefs for the security services.

It was not the appointments in themselves that were significant, but this statement he made to them:

“All of you…were chosen on merit. Your records gave you the job. Save for the new Chief of Army Staff whom I briefly met at his Command at the Multi-National Joint Task Force, in Chad, I don’t know any of you. Your records recommended you.”

In Nigeria, this is new. The normal practice has usually been to appoint by party members, hangers-on, and the recommendations of the First Lady and her friends. Sinners became saints. Worms became lions. Offices decayed. Institutions collapsed.

Take Buhari’s predecessor, for instance. Mr. Goodluck Jonathan was virtually appointed to the Vice-Presidency in the first place in 2007 by the outgoing leader, Olusegun Obasanjo. When President Umaru Yar’Adua died in 2010, Mr. Jonathan became President. Few people could have been more ill-suited in temperament, motivation, ambition or confidence than Jonathan was, and his five years in charge demonstrated that point.

When Buhari arrives in Washington DC today on his first official visit to the United States, he will travel on a different firmament of credibility and hope. The United States, which never hid its disdain for the Jonathan kleptocracy masquerading as theatre, will be throwing at his feet a giant red carpet as it tries to encourage genuine democratic reforms and institutions.

Buhari should walk that carpet with pride, as long as Nigeria remembers that the United States is no Santa Claus. For many years, the US worked with the playbook, which said Nigeria would disintegrate in 2015. It hasn’t; which means that almost suddenly, Nigeria has regained the status of a vast market that was thought to have been lost.

In other words, because the dog in the hunt hunts for the dog, this visit is not only about what the US can do for Nigeria, but also what Nigeria can do for the US. The US can be a strong ally in Nigeria’s economic rebirth, just as a strong, vibrant Nigeria can be a major factor in the battle against the advance of sophisticated terrorist groups in Africa, and become an even bigger trading partner.

There are strong expectations in Nigeria that the US will come into the battle against Boko Haram, but few people know that in all of Africa, the US reluctantly has only 42 uniformed personnel in peacekeeping missions. The corruption and incoherence of the Jonathan government complicated matters in the past few years, leaving ill-digested and abandoned policy initiatives all over the place, but to obtain US engagement in the Boko Haram offensive is a significant policy shift Buhari should aim for.

The US can also help Nigeria’s efforts to protect her territorial waters, and halt the menace of small arms and light weapons.

Of course, it can assist in the war against corruption, and Nigeria should begin from Washington DC and its environs, particularly the State of Maryland, where a lot of prominent former Nigerian officials, including diplomats, have invested their loot in expensive and expansive real estate.

Those properties are not difficult to recover, but Nigeria has never demonstrated the will. In the case of Dipreye Alamieyeseigha, Mr. Jonathan’s former boss and friend whom he would later grant state pardon following his conviction on corruption charges, the US did invite Nigeria to claim a $700,000 Maryland mansion and a Massachusetts investment account worth about $400,000 that were recovered from the former governor. Jonathan refused, true to his faith that stealing is not corruption, and the US kept the items. This is a good time for Nigeria to file a new claim, and to work with the US to recover similar Nigerian loot that litter the length and breadth of the country.

It is also a good time to commence a review of Nigeria’s diplomatic objectives in the US, which has for too long been nebulous at best, with Nigerian diplomats spending far more time worshipping Abuja than actually representing Nigeria in the country. Nigerian diplomacy in the US can achieve so much more if it saw itself as serving Nigeria rather than Aso Rock, and focused on channeling Nigeria’s considerable resources of education and energy and investment into Nigeria.

In this connection, one of Buhari’s key objectives should be a strong policy to encourage Nigerian professionals in specific sectors, such as medicine and education, to boost Nigeria’s capacity. The US can help with this, and it is a far cheaper, more productive, and more sustainable response to the challenge in those sectors than the so-called aid that repeatedly vanishes. As the security and electricity situations improve, local tourism will also enjoy a major boost.

Speaking of tourism, the US is a big beneficiary of Nigerian medical tourism; Nigeria gains nothing because our tourism policy is a hoax. There is no time better than the present to rectify this imbalance.

Nigeria should also reach out to her excellent pool of second-generation citizens that is being lost to the US because of the last 50 years of terrible policies.

While in Washington DC, it is a good idea for Buhari to meet with Nigerians in the country and hear their concerns directly. This is a powerful citizens’ group, but it has no voting rights, an idea that was roundly suppressed by the Jonathan government despite the many promises of the president himself. Of equal importance, the Buhari government can find substantial financing for infrastructure among the army of Nigerians abroad if it comes up with an appropriate policy. This has helped some other countries in the past.

While in Washington DC, Buhari must educate himself about the assortment of seedy but exorbitant public relations consultancies granted to layers of undefined Americans by the last administration that his government is probably still paying for. In one widely-known case, that consultancy company wrote one newspaper article for President Jonathan; it had a basic contract of $1.2million!

While in Washington, Buhari should ask about the $480 million forfeited Abacha funds about which Nigeria’s Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project wrote to the U.S. Department of Justice last March. Last year, a U.S. District Judge in the US capital had ordered that the funds, which were frozen by the department, be forfeited to U.S. control. That department had also frozen more than $458 million in corruption proceeds hidden by Abacha and his conspirators in different countries.

Buhari may also wish to be reminded that also last March, it was announced that a further $380 million of the Abacha loot was to be returned by Switzerland to Nigeria, meaning that the Swiss alone, by that sum, would have returned over $1billion to Nigeria.

In June 2014, Liechtenstein returned $227m to Nigeria, following which President Jonathan set up a committee of cabinet Ministers to determine how it would be used.
M
any of these answers, Buhari would be pleased to know, are right there in Washington DC this week, and he can return to Abuja a very wealthy and proud leader in many ways.

6 Comments

  • Author’s gravatar

    Mr Olumhense.if I may ask, what criteria was used in appointing the current INEC Chairman…Wa the criteria a ‘new’ thing in Nigeria like the appointment of the service chiefs or is it a ‘normal’ practice……We didnt hear you criticize the appointment of this lady in a sensitive position as that of inec, neither that of the DSS Director who later became an acting one…..Mr Sonola return back to the middle ground…not all your avid readers support one party or the other…we want objectivity from you sir.

  • Author’s gravatar

    Thank you Sonala for your persistent objectivity motivated by love of country. This president is determined to fundamentally redirect and return this country to the path of sanity, following the especially tragic tenure of the last administration. To those who are still asking and doubting if the change has commenced, I say fasten your seatbelts!

    • Author’s gravatar

      Has Nigeria ever been on the path of sanity since our so called independence of 1960? And is the last administration the only tragic tenure of the Nigerian nation? I am just asking!!!

  • Author’s gravatar

    Oga Sonala is mum on the Gay Rights Issue for which America is going to pressure Nigeria to rescind.

  • Author’s gravatar

    Mr Sonala Olumhense thank you for your candid advice to our President on how to go about recovering Nigeria’s stolen funds scattered in the US and Europe. Let’s hope that our current president is better suited “in temperament, motivation, ambition or confidence than Jonathan was” as you would say. But let’s also hope that this time around there should be a real departure from in your words “The normal practice has usually been to appoint by party mmembers, hangers-on, and the recommendations of the First Lady and her friends”. However,methinks it’s too early to cheer, rather we ought watch President Buhari very closely with an open and objective mind. Otherwise, we may unwittingly be celebrating a new set of manipulators in the affairs of Nigeria. You just mentioned how Jonathan was appointed as Vice President to Umaru Yar’Adua by Obasanjo. You forgot to also mention how Yar’Adua was appointed and by who. You forgot to mention how Obasanjo was appointed and by who. How were Abdusalami,Abacha,Shonekan,Babangida, Buhari(1st time),Shagari,Obasanjo(1st time), Murtala Mohamed,Gowon,Ironsi and Tafawa Balewa all appointed to lead us unto the present mess Nigeria is in now? Unless we get to the root of the Nigerian Corruption and deal with ourselves honestly and objectively,we only end up clipping/prunning the branches of corruption,leaving the trunk to yield new buds. Any “mission of Change” that doesn’t truthfully re-structure the Corrupt Unitary System of government wil only end up in a new set of opportunists.The foundation of Nigerian corruption is laid in the faulty unitary system which we corruptly call “Federal” – thus the system that believes in sharing rather than baking the national cake.

  • Author’s gravatar

    This piece couldn’t have been penned by no other than the veteran prose master, Sonola, himself. Sure, brother, you’ve made the work of the President much easier for him by coming out with this well-thought out agenda for him as he meets with Obama. I hope the minders of Buhari will take note of the points you have raised here. One commentator said your’re mute on the raging gay or same-sex marriage issue. Let me answer him by saying that it’s a waste of space advising Buhari to turn down any suggestion from Washigton that he turns Nigeria into Sodom and Gomorrah. Gay or the so called same-sex marriage is an affront to the cherished custom of the Africans. You don’t need to warn African leaders to reject any call on them by the Obamas of this world to adopt the policy of same-sex marriage. The African people are ready to stone any African leader that even try to mention that phrase to their people, not to talk of seeking to adopt the policy. Apart from that, Buhari is a strong Muslim. He knows the implication of even discussing this vexed and very obnoxious matter with Obama. As Obama brings up the matter( but I don’t think he would, knowing our strong aversion to this abnormality), Buhari’s best bet is to tell his host, “Please, as a Muslim, Allah would behead me if He heard me discuss this evil matter with an infidel. Please, let’s talk about other important matters.” Sly Edaghese (E:slyedaghese@yahoo.com).