Yet to discuss future of ministers with anyone • Rates N’Assembly, police low
Shola Oyeyipo in Abuja
President
Muhammadu Buhari yesterday went down memory lane, reviewing his career
in the military and said it was hellish even as he recounted that he
lived through the momentous events, particularly in 1966, which
witnessed coups, counter-coups and later a civil war.
The
president spoke during a pre-recorded interview aired by the Nigerian
Television Authority (NTA) last night and commented on various issues of
national interest, including his second term priorities, shape of his
next cabinet, the nation’s worsening insecurity and relationship between
the executive and legislative arms of government among others.
Buhari,
who in his assessment of institutions of government rated the National
Assembly and the Police low in performance, said he expected a higher
level of efficiency from military service chiefs, refraining from
blaming them for the escalating insecurity situation in the country.
Responding
to a question: ‘Who is Buhari?’ from the show anchor, the president
said: “I think I went through hell throughout my career in the military.
I was a lieutenant in Lagos during the first coup, January 15, 1966. If
you bother about Nigerian history, you read about coup and counter
coup, civil war, coup, counter coup. I was all in it, including in
detention for three and a quarter years. So, I am fully qualified, you
know, [to be called] as a suffering Nigerian.”
But he thanked
Nigerians for showing him love, noting that after been rejected thrice
in the presidential elections, they found him worthy of leadership in
the fourth and fifth runs.
Speaking on his impending second term,
he appealed to Nigerians to trust him to make a good judgment on the
choice of his next set of ministers.
He said if no one has had
any cause so far to accuse any of his first term ministers of corruption
or any act of misdemeanour, Nigerians should then be confident that he
would again make the best choice for his second term in office.
Disclosing
that he was yet to discuss any issue relating to the next choice of his
ministers with anybody and would not start the discussion with the
interviewer, Buhari reiterated that Nigerians should trust him to decide
on who among the ministers he will retain and those he will bid the
final goodbye.
“I have said goodbye to them for the fours
years. I haven’t discussed it with anybody. You won’t be the first
person I will discuss it with. And anybody who hasn’t got any evidence
against any minister should trust me – which of the minister I will
retain; which one I will say goodbye and very sincerely to. I won’t go
beyond that because I haven’t discussed it with anybody yet,” he said.
Buhari
also lamented the strained relationship he had with the National
Assembly, saying he confronted Senate President Bukola Saraki and
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, on their
decisions to delay budget passage for seven months.
The president
who said he rated the two leaders low on the issue of patriotism, said
he told them that their action was harmful to the economy but his hands
were tied by the constitution which orders him to pass through them.
He
said: “I spoke personally to the Senate President Bukola Saraki and the
leader of the House, Dogara. They could not deny it. I told them how do
they feel to hold the country to ransom for seven months without
passing a budget? I said for seven months they were hurting the country.
So really, in terms of patriotism, I think I rated them very low
indeed.
“Going by the provisions of the constitution, there are
things that must pass through the National Assembly but to hold a budget
for seven months cannot be justified.”
Asked how he felt on the
rampant cases of kidnap and other forms of insecurity threatening the
country, Buhari said he felt very bad, blaming the menace on people in
the neighbourhood whom he said failed to expose the criminals living
among them.
He also took a swipe at the police and traditional
rulers, saying they ought to be at the forefront of the battle against
criminal activities in various communities where they operate, but have
failed.
While promising to reverse the trend, he said the police
were not given uniforms and guns to impress people but rather to
distinguish them and empower them to fight criminals.
He said: “I
feel very bad indeed because there are failures of neighbourhood
security in the sense that those who are perpetrating these atrocities
against communities, state and the country, they come from somewhere in
Nigeria.
“Their neighbourhoods know them. And we have the
traditional rulers, then of course, the police at the frontline, the
police in every major town and city in this country. As I said, they
were not given the uniforms and the riffles to impress anybody but to
secure the people. In this, I think the community leaderships and the
police have failed this country.”
While alluding to his
efficiency in his days as a military officer, Buhari said he was the
only military personnel in his own time, who commanded three out of the
four divisions at the time.
According to him, something went
wrong with the military particularly between 1999 and 2014, which he
said affected the sense of efficiency and accountability of military
personnel.
He said: “You see, I was the only officer that
commanded three out of the four divisions – the first division was in
Lagos; the second division in Ibadan, the third division in Jos
“I
am still expecting more but I am thinking of what happened between 1999
to 2014. I suspect that a lot of things went wrong, including
accountability and efficiency of the military and other law enforcement
agencies.”
Buhari also spoke on his frustrations and concerns in
the last four years, pointing out that though some progress had been
made in the anti-graft war, he is frustrated by the slow pace of the
fight.
According to him, “In the process of going through the
police, investigations and later prosecution, the process is slowed down
and is frustrating.
“My frustration is that we cannot move
faster in the prosecution and punishing the real big graft. We made some
progress. We recovered a number of assets – fixed assets and money in
banks, including in Europe and America, but under this system, you can’t
be too much in a hurry, even including using whistle blowers.
“You
have to go to the police to go through the rigmarole of full
investigations before prosecution. That is my biggest frustration
really.”

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