Latest News

IBB tells buhari to go home 2019

FORMER military President, General Ibrahim Babangida has advised President Muhammadu Buhari against seeking re-election in 2019, as he declared Nigeria deserves the new generation of leaders from 2019.

General Babangida, in a statement on Sunday which was signed on his behalf by his Media spokesman, Prince Kassim Afegbua said that the new leadership needed from 2019 upwards must be one that will ensure national unity and respect the nation’s diverse ethnic configurations.

IBB stated that the time has come for Nigeria to deliberately provoke systems and models that will put paid to the “recycling leadership experimentation,” while embracing what he called “new generational leadership evolution.”

He gave the qualities of the new leadership of his vision as one “with the essential attributes of responsive, responsible and proactive leadership configuration to confront the several challenges that we presently face.”

He declared: “In 2019 and beyond, we should come to a national consensus that we need new breed leadership with requisite capacity to manage our diversities and jump-start a process of launching the country on the super highway of technology-driven leadership in line with the dynamics of modern governance.

“It is short of saying enough of this analogue system. Let’s give way for digital leadership orientation with all the trappings of consultative, constructive, communicative, interactive and utility-driven approach where everyone has a role to play in the process of enthroning accountability and transparency in governance.”

While affirming the rights of President Buhari to vote and be voted for, Babangida said that Nigerians from May 29, 2019, should be led by a new set of leadership.

According to him, Nigerians should for now help Buhari to complete his term in 2019 and prepare the way for the new generation of leaders to assume the mantle of leadership.

He stated: “In the fullness of our present realities, we need to cooperate with President Muhammadu Buhari to complete his term of office on May 29th, 2019 and collectively prepare the way for new generation leaders to assume the mantle of leadership of the country.

While offering this advice, I speak as a stakeholder, former president, concerned Nigerian and a patriot who desires to see new paradigms in our shared commitment to getting this country running. While saying this also, I do not intend to deny President Buhari his inalienable right to vote and be voted for, but there comes a time in the life of a nation, when personal ambition should not override national interest.

“This is the time for us to reinvent the will and tap into the resourcefulness of the younger generation, stimulate their
entrepreneurial initiatives and provoke a conduce environment to grow national economy both at the micro and macro levels.

“Contemporary leadership has to be proactive and not reactive. It must factor in citizens’ participation. Its language of discourse must be persuasive, not agitated and abusive. It must give room for confidence building. It must build consensus and form the aggregate opinion on any issue to reflect the wishes of the people across the country. It must gauge the mood of the country at every point in time in order to send the right message.

“It must share in their aspirations and give them cause to have confidence in the system. Modern leadership is not just about “fighting” corruption, it is about plugging the leakages and building systems that will militate against corruption.

“Accountability in leadership should flow from copious examples. It goes beyond mere sloganeering. My support for a new breed leadership derives from the understanding that it will show a marked departure from recycled leadership to creating new paradigms that will breathe fresh air into our present polluted leadership actuality.”

He added: “The next election in 2019, therefore, presents us a unique opportunity to reinvent the will and provoke fresh leadership that would immediately begin the process of healing the wounds in the land and ensuring that the wishes and aspirations of the people are realized in building and sustaining national cohesion and consensus.”

He lamented that Nigeria at 57 years after independent has continued to grapple with questions of leadership, while in the process losing the attributes that made it the giant of Africa at a stage.

“At 57, we are still a nation in search of the right leadership to contend with the dynamics of a 21st century Nigeria,” IBB said adding that having been privileged to lead the country at one stage and having interacted with variety of Nigerians he has no hesitation to conclude that Nigeria’s strength lies in her diversity.

He lamented: “But exploring and exploiting that diversity as a huge potential has remained a hard nut to crack, not because we have not made efforts, but building a consensus on any national issue often has to go through the incinerator of those diverse ethnic configurations.”

He further submitted that a lot depends on Nigerians, both as leaders and followers to get the right leadership mix adding that thee compatriots must, however, resolve to engender a Nigeria whose leaders must encapsulate the undiluted commitment to ideals that run a pluralistic society.

He said: “A lot depends on our roles both as followers and leaders in our political undertakings. As we proceed to find the right thesis that would resolve the leadership question, we must bear in mind a formula that could engender national development and the undiluted commitment of our leaders to a resurgence of the moral and ethical
foundations that brought us to where we are as a pluralistic and
multi-ethnic society.”

According to him, while Nigeria was on one hand “our dear native land, where tribes and tongues may differ but in brotherhood, we stand,” on the other hand, the country has continued to struggle with itself and stumbling in its quest to become a modern state.

General Babangida lamented the growing violence in the society and called on the Federal Government to make necessary changes to the security apparatuses to bring it in line with the sophistication in crime in the polity.

He also advocated the adoption of State Police to complement the Federal Police.

He stated: “In the past few months also, I have taken time to reflect on a number of issues plaguing the country. I get frightened by their dimensions. I get worried by their colourations. I get perplexed by their gory themes.

“From Southern Kaduna to Taraba state, from Benue state to Rivers, from Edo state to Zamfara, it has been a theatre of blood with the cake of crimson. In Dansadau in Zamfara state recently, North-West of Nigeria, over 200 souls were wasted for no justifiable reason.

“The pogrom in Benue state has left me wondering if truly this is the same country some of us fought to keep together. I am alarmed by the amount of blood-letting across the land. Nigeria is now being described as a land where blood flows like the river, where tears have refused to dry up. Almost on a daily basis, we are both mourning and
grieving, and often times left helpless by the sophistication of crimes.”

On the growing attacks by herdsmen in the states, Babangida asked the leaders to re-orient the herdsmen, adding that the growing culture of violence represents the extent of discontent in the society.

He said: “The festering nature of this crisis is an inelegant testimony to the sharp divisions and polarizations that exist across the country,” adding that the nation must collectively rise up to the occasion and do something urgently.

He further counselled: “If left unchecked, it portends danger to our collective existence as one nation bound by common destiny; and may snowball into another internecine warfare that would not be good for nation-building.

We have to reorient the minds of the herdsmen or gun-men to embrace ranching as a new and modern way to herd cattle. We also need to expand the capacity of the Nigeria Police, the Nigeria Army, the Navy and Air Force to provide the necessary security for all.”

The former military leader also stated that while the government has recorded a level of success in dealing with the insurgent Boko Haram, their activities are unrelenting. He said that he was advising as a professional that the battle is taken to the inner fortress of Sambisa Forest, rather than restricting the forces to responding to the insurgents’ ambushes from time to time.

He further submitted: “Due to the peculiarity of our country, we must begin community policing to close the gaps that presently exist in our policing system.

“We cannot continue to use old methods and expect new results. We just have to constructively engage the people from time to time through platforms that would help them ventilate their opinions and viewpoints.”

On restructuring of the polity, Babangida restated his earlier support for the agenda adding that restructuring is an idea that the time has come.

He said: “Like I did state in my previous statement late last year, devolution of power or restructuring is an idea whose time has come if we must be honest with ourselves. We need to critically address the issue and take informed positions based on the expectations of the people on how to make the union work better. Political parties should not exploit this as a decoy to woo voters because election time is here. We need to begin the process of restructuring both in the letter and spirit of it.”

He was unimpressed with the Change mantra of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) so far adding that he thought that the party, having adopted the change mantra, would behave differently.

IBB said: We are still experiencing huge infrastructural deficit across the country and one had thought the APC-led Federal Government would behave differently from their counterparts in previous administrations. I am hesitant to ask; where is the promised change?”

S-Davies Wande

Recent Posts

PDP wants intending defectors to leave before national convention

•Keen to deny them role in leadership new selection AS the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)…

33 minutes ago

Threat to exit Nigeria does not absolve you of liabilities, FG tells Facebook, Instagram

THE Federal Government, through the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), on Saturday told…

42 minutes ago

Fulani group links Benue killings to ban on open grazing

•As Tiv professors urge FG to adopt community-driven security approach THE Gan Allah Fulani Development…

43 minutes ago

Nigeria needs radical restructuring, complete overhaul of political parties, others ―Ex-chief of staff, Gambari

•Says leadership recruitment process must reward visionary, patriotic individuals FOR Nigerians to enjoy the full…

58 minutes ago

TVC to air The Cable’s documentary on Malabu scandal on Sunday evening

TVC News will on Sunday broadcast the premiere of an investigative documentary on the $1.3…

1 hour ago

15,000 doctors left Nigeria for abroad in five years —NMA president

•Says one doctor now attends to 8,000 patients THE Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) has lamented…

1 hour ago

Welcome

Install

This website uses cookies.