The Director General of the Budget Office of the Federation (BOF), Tanimu Yakubu, has lauded late former President Muhammadu Buhari’s contributions to the development of Nigeria, describing him as “The Last Stoic of the Savannah”.
In a tribute to the late Buhari, the Director General of the Budget Office of the Federation praised his handling of affairs in the defunct Petroleum Trust Fund (PEF), saying each naira spent, project executed was vetted to achieve set goals.
Yakubu highlighted that under late Buhari’s watch in PTF, not a single culvert was built without cause, contracts were not padded, and not a single project was left behind as a ghost, saying the organisation did not manage a budget, but upheld a trust.
He said, “We knew him not as a myth, but as a man. Those of us who laboured with him in the quiet corridors of the Petroleum Trust Fund saw his principles sharpen into policy. That era was not an illusion. It was execution. Each naira stretched, each project vetted, each promise measured by the same ascetic yardstick by which he governed himself.
“Not a culvert was built without cause. Not a contract was padded. And not a single project was left behind as a ghost. We did not manage a budget—we upheld a trust.
“There, in the modest offices of the PTF, we discovered that patriotism could be methodical, that spreadsheets could become acts of national healing, and that discipline, properly applied, could be more revolutionary than slogans.
“Buhari proved that when a leader leads with clean hands, even limited means can move a country forward. He believed, fiercely, stubbornly, that Nigeria deserved to be whole and honest, even if the world around her was not.
“He had no taste for the indulgences of power. No appetite for stolen wealth. No flair for personal enrichment. His only wealth was duty and perhaps that is why he never seemed poor in soul.”
The Budget Office DG in a tribute said, “to Muhammadu Buhari, General, Guardian, and Reluctant Revolutionary. I sit in the solemn quiet of the capital, while the nation moves northward to Daura, drawn by duty, memory, and the unspoken gravity of a final farewell. But though the body may remain in Abuja, the spirit rides the dusty winds of Katsina, following his cortege as it weaves through the brittle silence of villages that once knew his stride, and now bow in reverent farewell.
“How does one mourn a man who chose to live simply in a complicated world? A man who owned power, but never let it own him?
“Muhammadu Buhari was never flamboyant, but he was luminous. His presence did not crash into rooms; it distilled into them, like slow wisdom. In an age of performance, he remained a man of substance. In a time of noise, he chose silence. And in a country gasping for heroes, he dared to be austere.
“Now he returns to Daura, not to retire, but to rest. And in that rest, a question echoes louder than the elegy: Who among us dares to live with such sparse grandeur again? Who will take up the cross of discipline, in a generation seduced by spectacle? Who will defend institutions, not for applause, but because it is right? Who will serve, not to eat, but to build?
“His legacy is not in marble or gold, but in memory and example. In a time when public virtue is often mocked, when the state staggers under the weight of corruption, and when too many leaders think only of tenure and not of posterity,
“Muhammadu Buhari’s life stands like a lean, unyielding baobab, gnarled by storms, but never uprooted. He reminds us that austerity is not failure. That restraint is not weakness. That the quiet man, steady and sincere, may outlast the charlatan.
“He was not perfect, but he was rare. Let us not simply bury him. Let us exhume his example. Let us ask what it means to truly serve. Let us confront our cynicism with the discipline he practised, not just preached.
“Let us revive institutions with the moral clarity he demanded. And let us measure ourselves, not by wealth accumulated or words spoken, but by work done, with clean hands and clear conscience.
“We do not grieve for him alone. We grieve for the ethic he embodied and for the silence his departure leaves in our national soul. But even in death, his life still points forward: toward integrity, toward sacrifice, toward a Nigeria still possible.
“May his soul rest in the peace he earned. And may we find, in his memory, the courage to become worthy inheritors of his stubborn hope”.
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