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Buhari and Idiagbon: A Missed Opportunity for Nigeria Print E-mail
Written by Max Siollun   
Sunday, 08 July 2007

BUHARI AND IDIAGBON: A MISSED OPPORTUNITY FOR NIGERIA
By MAX SIOLLUN
maxsiollun@yahoo.com


Speak to any Nigerian and you will hear the familiar complaints about Nigeria’s sorry plight.  About the waste, mismanagement, corruption and lack of environmental sanitation.  Nigerians yearn for a Government that will tackle these problems head on.  Nigerians although supporting democracy believe that the institutional checks and balances it imposes would inhibit even a well intentioned government, and would prevent it from pushing through the punishing reforms and hardline policies that are necessary to change Nigeria.  As one acquaintance put it to me: “Nigeria missed its chance with the military”.   The acquaintance is no apologist for military rule but his point was that Nigeria needs a tough, authoritarian regime to tackle its problems and implement the unpopular but corrective policies that a democratic government cannot afford to take for fear of being voted out of office.   Yet while Nigerians complain about the problems all around them, they seem to have collective amnesia and never refer to the fact that almost two generations ago, they had a regime with a programme to tackle all of the problems they always complain about.  

YET ANOTHER COUP

The stage was set for another military rescue operation.  On the last day of 1983, the army abandoned the barracks in order to “save this nation from imminent collapse”.   President Shehu Shagari was overthrown only three months after being re-elected for his second and final term of office in an election that was marred by accusations of electoral malpractice.  Scarred by the memory of the mass bloodshed that followed the bloody military coups of 1966, the coup plotters wisely did not harm any senior Government figures.  The only casualty of the coup was Brigadier Ibrahim Bako who was killed while trying to arrest President Shagari in Abuja.  Some have speculated that Bako was the leader of the coup.  


If Shagari had taken a look at Nigeria’s history books, he would have noticed that the country’s military coups have almost always been carried out by the same group of soldiers.   The young NCOs and Lieutenants that blasted Major-General Aguiyi-Ironsi from power in 1966, became Colonels that overthrew his successor General Gowon in 1975, and they became the Brigadiers and Major-Generals that overthrew Shagari.  Had Shagari acted decisively early during his term and retired these men, his Government may have survived (the only notable senior officer retired by Shagari was Major-General Joe Garba – who had double crossed his own brother in law during a military coup in 1975).  Oversight of history and military postings played a part in Shagari’s downfall.  Had he, in his position as the Nigerian Armed Forces’ Commander-in-Chief, paid more attention to sensitive military postings he would have noticed that many of the officers who took part in the coup were stationed in or in close proximity to the country’s commercial nerve centre in Lagos.  Among the plotters stationed in Lagos were the army’s Director of Staff Duties and Plans: Major-General Ibrahim Babangida, the Military Secretary: Brigadier Tunde Idiagbon, and a hitherto unknown brigade commander called Brigadier Sani Abacha.

THE NEW ORDER

As usual the Nigerian public welcomed news of a military coup d’etat and the overthrow of a Government they elected, with characteristic jubilation.  The officers who led the coup installed Major-General Muhammadu Buhari as Head of State, and as the Chairman of a new Supreme Military Council (SMC).  The tables below show the members of the new SMC and the Military Governors appointed by the new regime.


JANUARY 1984: SUPREME MILITARY COUNCIL

Name Position State of Origin
Major-General Muhammadu Buhari
  • Head of State
  • Chairman of the – Supreme Military Council
  • Chairman of the Federal Executive Council
  • Commander in Chief – Nigerian Armed Forces
Katsina
Brigadier (later Major-General) Tunde Idiagbon Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters Kwara State
Major-General Domkat Bali Defence Secretary Plateau
Major-General Ibrahim Babangida Chief of Army Staff Niger
Commodore Augustus Aikhomu Chief of Naval Staff Bendel
Air Vice Marshal Ibrahim Mahmud Alfa Chief of Air Staff Adamawa
Major-General Mamman Jiya Vatsa Minister of the Federal Capital Territory Niger
Brigadier Yohanna Kure GOC, 82 Division – Enugu Kaduna
Brigadier Ola Oni General Officer Commanding, 1st Mechanised Infantry Division - Kaduna Lagos
Brigadier Sani Abacha General Officer Commanding, 2nd Armoured Division – Ibadan Kano
Colonel Salihu Ibrahim GOC, 3rd Mechanised Division – Kaduna Kwara
Brigadier Mohammed Magoro Minister of Internal Affairs Sokoto
Brigadier Gado Nasko   Niger
Brigadier Paul Omu   Bendel
Navy Captain Ebitu Ukiwe   Imo
Air Commodore Larry Koinyan   Rivers
 

JANUARY 1984: MILIARTY GOVERNORS1

    STATE MILITARY GOVERNOR
    Anambra Navy Captain Allison Madueke
    Bendel Brigadier Jerry Useni
    Benue Brigadier John Atom Kpera
    Borno Major-General W.A.Waziri
    Cross Rivers Navy Captain Ekpo Archibong
    Gongola Major-General M.D.Jega
    Imo Brigadier Ike Nwachukwu
    Kaduna Air-Commodore U.Muazu
    Kano Air-Commodore Abdullahi
    Kwara Group Captain B.Latinwo
    Lagos Group Captain Gbolahan Mudashiru
    Niger Lt-Colonel David Mark
    Ogun Lt-Colonel Donaldson Oladipo Diya
    Ondo Commodore Michael Otiko
    Oyo Lt-Col O.Popoola
    Plateau Navy Captain Samuel Atukun
    Rivers Police Commissioner Fidelis Oyakhilome
    Sokoto Brigadier Garba Duba

 Up till the time of the coup, Buhari had been the General Officer Commanding the 3rd Armoured Division in Jos.  The disciplined, tough and stoic Brigadier (later Major-General) Tunde Idiagbon, was appointed as the Chief of Staff at Supreme Headquarters.  Having neutralised the incumbent Chief of Army Staff – Lt-General Mohammed Wushishi, Major-General Ibrahim Babangida became the new Chief of Army Staff and de facto number three in the new regime.  Wushishi was a symbol of the remarkable reconciliation that had occurred in Nigeria after the civil war of 1967-1970. At the end of the war in early 1970, Wushishi had entertained Conrad Nwawo (a leading officer on the opposing side) as his “guest of honour” at Onitsha barracks.   

The new military regime suspended several parts of the constitution (primarily those relating to freedom of assembly, association and political activity), banned party politics, declared all borders closed, and began to arrest and detain ministers and officials from Shagari’s Government on charges of corruption and embezzlement. 

WAR AGAINST INDISCIPLINE

Buhari and Idiagbon correctly identified corruption and indiscipline as the main constraints on Nigeria’s development.  These twin evils have in the view of many, become a way of life for many Nigerians.  For this reason, they launched a nationwide campaign called “War Against Indiscipline” (“WAI”).  The WAI campaign was aimed at tackling the most anti-social Nigerian characteristics such as indiscipline, corruption, and lack of environmental sanitation.  Nigerians learned and grudgingly accepted social behaviour that was the norm in other countries around the world.  Queuing suddenly became all the rage in Nigeria!  Buhari and Idiagbon understood that the undisciplined Nigerian psyche was not going to change by persuasion and that their WAI campaign had to backed by the threat of force.  Although they had always cried out for a Government that would root out the rampant indiscipline in Nigeria, white collar workers were irked when they learned that the WAI campaign would lead to them being punished and that it would apply to them as well as the rest of “ordinary” Nigerians.

Corruption

There had been widespread allegations of corruption against many members of Shagari’s government.  For this reason, military tribunals were set up to try ministers in Shagari’s administration that had been accused of embezzling public funds.  These tribunals were chaired by military officers and had the power to impose massive prison sentences.   The only right of appeal from the tribunals was to the SMC which was also exclusively comprised of military officers (and the Inspector-General of police).  The military were effectively acting as prosecutor, judge and jury.  Unsurprisingly the Nigerian Bar Association barred its member lawyers from participating in the tribunals.  Undeterred, Buhari and Idiagbon pressed on with the tribunals and several prominent politicians were convicted of various corruption charges and given massive prison sentences ranging from twenty to over two hundred years. Given that most of the convicted were already over fifty years old, it was obvious that they would die in prison if they served the rest of their sentences.  Among those convicted were prominent politicians such as Anthony Enahoro and Jim Nwobodo.  The tribunals effectively put Nigeria’s political elite in jail.  

Although the harsh sentences and nature of the tribunals were criticised, it is arguable that Nigeria needed these Nuremberg style trials in order to free itself from its corrupt past.  The era of Buhari and Idiagbon was the first, and only time that Nigerian public officials were tried, and held accountable for their actions in office.   The trials would have had more legitimacy if they had been held in civilian courts, presided over by civilian legal officers, and open to the public.  This way Nigerians would have seen justice in action and had a chance to scrutinise the actions of their leaders who had so badly let them down and misused their resources.  By virtue of their centrally regimented military training and outlook, Idiagbon and Buhari were fundamentally unable to grasp the niceties of, and the political legitimacy they could have derived from holding fair and open trials.   The public fully backed their assault on the corrupt elite, if not their methods.   The trials and WAI campaign also had a psychological impact on other “don’t know how he got rich” individuals in Nigeria.  For the first time in Nigeria’s history it became unwise for those with ill gotten to flaunt their wealth – for fear of attracting the attention of Buhari’s anti-corruption drive.

The Press

The press had a field day under the civilian Government of Shagari.  Freed by the absence of criticism-sensitive soldiers in Government, the press launched constant vitriolic attacks against public officials and often published articles that would not be tolerated in even the most liberal western democracy.  The press quite literally abused the freedom given to it and the stinging criticism directed by the press actually resulted in some journalists being charged with sedition (inciting rebellion against the Government).  As a reaction to this, on 1st January 1984 (day one of Buhari’s regime), the SMC promulgated Decree 4 of 1984: the Public Officers (Protection Against False Accusation) Decree.  Decree 4 made it a criminal offence to publish any article that brought the Government or any public official into disrepute.  Tunde Thompson and Nduka Iraboh of The Guardian Newspapers were unfortunate enough to fall foul of Decree 4 and were imprisoned.  Decree 4 was no doubt an overreaction by Buhari’s regime and strained relations between the FMG and the press. 

THE BEGINNING OF THE END

While Buhari’s austere policies could be justified on the basis that he was battling against corruption and economic waste, his public relations machinery was poor.  He made a number of strategic errors and failed to ingratiate himself with the mainly southern based print media.  His regime was savaged by the press as a result (many of Nigeria’s print houses were then owned by the multi-billionaire businessman/politician: the late Moshood Abiola).

Loss of the South

There are several reasons for the Buhari’s loss of support in the south.  Firstly, the governing National Party of Nigeria which Buhari replaced had a “zoning” system for key Government posts which provided that certain Government positions would be “zoned” or reserved to persons from certain geographic parts of the country.  Since the presidency had been zoned to President Shagari (from the North), south-westerners logically thought that the presidency would be zoned to them when president Shagari completed his second and final term of office in 1987.   They were wrong.   One of those who hoped to benefit from the NPN’s zoning system was the multi-billionaire businessman, Moshood Abiola.  Abiola assumed that when President Shagari’s term of office expired in 1987, the governing National Party of Nigeria (NPN) would “zone” the presidency to the south, and he would be allowed to run for president.   How wrong he was.  When Abiola articulated his presidential ambition, he was rebuffed by the powerful Transport Minister: Umaru Dikko, who told him that “the Presidency is not for sale to the highest bidder”.  Abiola “retired” from politics soon after – totally exasperated with the NPN.  Abiola was however to remerge from the shadows to play a key role in Nigeria’s political history.

The make up of Buhari’s SMC also troubled southerners.  Virtually all of the senior positions in the SMC were occupied by northern Muslims: only five of the SMC’s sixteen members were from the south.  Additionally, there has always been an unwritten rule that the Nigerian Head of State and his deputy cannot be from the same religion or part of the country.  Buhari broke this unwritten rule when he appointed Tunde Idiagbon (who although Yoruba, was from the north and was also a Muslim). The other influential pro-Buhari figure in the regime was the Minister for Internal Affairs: Major-General Mohammed Magoro, who was a Muslim from Buhari’s home state of Sokoto.  The lopsided ethno-religious composition of the SMC, coupled with the fact that Buhari’s ascension to power pre-empted the zoning of the presidency to the south prompted some mischievous southerners to claim that the New Year’s Eve coup was a deliberate plan to prevent the south from gaining political control of the country, and was nothing more than an orchestrated preservation of the north’s political control of Nigeria by transferring power from northern civilians to northern soldiers.  The author personally believes that the personal ambition of the primary actors in the coup such as Babangida and Dogonyaro played the major motivating role for the coup rather than any Machiavellian plot to thwart the south (or any altruistic motives to benefit Nigeria as a whole).  Nevertheless, southerners were irked by the perceived northern bias of Buhari’s regime.

The Babangida Factor

With the civilian population powerless to terminate military rule, it was clear that only the military could do away with Buhari.  From this perspective, the Chief of Army Staff, Major-General Ibrahim Babangida was his greatest threat.  Babangida was a contrast to Buhari.  While Buhari was stern, serious and resolute, Babangida was deft, tactical and extremely devious.  He had systematically cultivated a loyal following of sycophantic mid-ranking officers over the years by making grandiose gestures and buying lavish presents for officers junior to him.  These officers now owed allegiance to him rather than to their nation, institution, or to the Head of State Buhari.  Babangida had managed to create a mini-personality cult within the military.  It is amazing that Buhari, knowing Babangida’s ambition and propensity for coup plotting allowed him to sit with his finger on the trigger as the Chief of Army Staff for so long.

As the net of Buhari’s anti-corruption drive widened, the trail of investigations led back to the Ministry of Defence. There were allegations that senior army officers were involved in drug dealing and rumours of some suspicious financial dealings at the Defence Ministry.  Some accusatory fingers were pointed at Babangida.  Nigerians never did get to find out the extent or nature of the allegations as a coup led by Babangida swept Buhari away before matters could proceed further. Not long after Buhari was replaced by Babangida, a senior and well respected journalist (Dele Giwa) was killed by a parcel bomb while he was working on a story that accused senior army officers of involvement in drug dealing.  Giwa’s murderers have never been found, although attempts have been made to prosecute Babangida, and two military intelligence officers: Colonel Tunde Togun and Brigadier Halilu Akilu, for his murder.

THE END

Buhari and Idiagbon did not realise that Babangida loyalists had been pre-positioned in key positions, ready for when Babangida needed them.  Buhari later spoke of certain elements within his regime who deliberately sanctioned unpopular moves which were disliked by the public so that they could create an atmosphere of political dissatisfaction great enough to justify another coup.  In early 1985, a military intelligence officer: Colonel Chris Alli, entered the office of Major-General Idiagbon and voiced his concerns about rumours of a pending coup.  In characteristically taciturn manner, Idiagbon simply replied “let them try” (a thinly veiled invitation for any potential for any coup plotter to do his worst).  Erroneously believing that Idiagbon had the security situation under control, Alli said no more about the coup rumours.  On August 27th 1985 (while Idiagbon was out of the country on a religious visit to Saudi Arabia), Buhari was overthrown in a military coup led by the Chief of Army Staff: Major-General Ibrahim Babangida.  On the evening of August 26th Buhari was joined in his official residence by Majors Dangiwa Umar (a Harvard University educated officer born into an aristocratic northern family), Lawan Gwadabe, Abdulmumuni Aminu and Sambo Dasuki.  After the five men watched the evening news, the Majors arrested Buhari at gunpoint.  Proving the old adage that “what goes around comes around”, a decade later Gwadabe and Dasuki were caught up in an alleged coup plot against General Sani Abacha for which Gwadabe was tortured and imprisoned, and Dasuki driven into exile.

If Buhari had taken a look at the past, he would have realised that in Nigerian politics, and in the Nigerian military, it is those to whom one entrusts his safety that need to be feared most.  In January 1966, Prime Minister Balewa was abducted and murdered by soldiers from the Federal Guard: a unit whose primary responsibility was to protect and guarantee the safety of Balewa.  Balewa’s successor as Head of State Major-General Aguiyi-Ironsi was abducted, tortured and shot dead by soldiers in his own entourage only seven months after the death of Balewa.  Aguiyi-Ironsi’s successor General Gowon was overthrown in July 1975, again with the connivance of officers from the Federal Guard – which as in Balewa’s case in 1966, was supposed to protect him.  In a stunning act of betrayal, the commanding officer of the Federal Guards Colonel Joe Garba (who was also Gowon’s brother in law) was the officer who in a nationwide broadcast, announced Gowon’s overthrow.   As mentioned above, the officers that overthrew President Shagari were pre-positioned around Nigeria’s nerve centre in Lagos.  Had Buhari and Idiagbon paid greater attention to those in their midst, their regime may have survived and Nigeria may have been a different country today.  Another factor that may have hastened Buhari and Idiagbon’s fall from power may have been their failure to award plum jobs to the officers who risked their necks in the 1983/4 coup that brought them to power.  It was an understood but unwritten rule from the July 1975 coup onwards that soldiers that executed successful coup plots should be rewarded with the bounty of juicy Government postings.  Buhari did not adhere to this rule.   Although the coup plotters that brought him to power were active in his regime, they were not in the upper echelons.   Many of these officers were middle grade officers, and perhaps in an attempt to maintain military hierarchy, Buhari did not want to appoint them to senior Government positions over the heads of more senior officers (who albeit had not played a part in the coup).   

FOR BETTER OR WORSE?

Ironically, the same people who prematurely rejoiced at Buhari and Idiagbon’s downfall are the same people who today recall their tenure with nostalgia.  If Buhari and Idiagbon had been allowed to stay in office for as long as Babangida did, they would have changed Nigeria forever – for the better.  As usual, Nigerians have only themselves to blame for creating the circumstances that led to their downfall.

Journalists who thought that better times lay ahead post-Buhari need only recall the murder of Dele Giwa to see how wrong they were.  The prisoners who thought that life would be less harsh under Babangida and Abacha should recall the consistent harassment and death of Gani Fawehinmi and Moshood Abiola respectively.  People complained about the draconian Decree 2 of 1984 – the State security (Detention of Persons) Decree which permitted the Federal Military Government to detain any person considered by the Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters to be a security threat, for up to three months without charge or trial.  Civil liberties organisations fumed and breathed a sigh of relief when Babangida took over, expecting Babangida to repeal Decree 2.  Babangida not only retained it, but extended the detention period under Decree 2 to six months and used it to detain those civil liberties and pro-democracy movements that had welcomed his assent to power.  

Those that felt that Buhari and Idiagbon were too “harsh” for imprisoning corrupt public officials, executing convicted drug dealers and armed robbers, should ask themselves whether they are proud of the fact that the average European cannot point out Nigeria’s location on a map, does not know its capital city, but “knows” that Nigeria is a country where corrupt people, drug dealers and other criminals come from.   Those that criticised the WAI for attempting to militarise civilian society need to ask themselves whether they prefer the undisciplined, corruption infested society that is Nigeria today.

Nigeria missed a golden opportunity to change for the better.




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

Those that felt that Buhari and Idiagbon were too “harsh” for imprisoning corrupt publi...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 08.07.2007 00:49

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12345671234567 is offline 
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 # 2

Max Siollun Says…
'' If Buhari and Idiagbon had been allowed to stay in office for as long as Babangida did, they would have changed Nigeria forever – for the better. As usual, Nigerians have only themselves to blame for creating the circumstances that led to their downfall. ''


Nonsense .Absolute Nonsense. Buhari-Idiagbon military regime with other military junta are complete aberration and their misdeed should not be eulogies in any way. Military occupation by its nature is highly antithetical to the governance of civil society. They forced their ways into governance of the civil society and succeeded in militarizing the psyche of the civil society. They came into governance with the pretext that they want to rid the civil society of corruption but they succeeded in enriching themselves and making themselves an emergent bourgeois oppressing the civil society today. Most retired army Generals are among the richest class of people in Nigeria today. So what are you talking about? THE BEST OTHRODOX FOR DEMOCRACY IS TO ALLOW MORE DEMOCRACY.
Make I no vex oo

Posted by 1234567| 08.07.2007 02:36

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AbraxasAbraxas is offline 
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 # 3

Hi, folks!

If some 20 years after subverting the Nigerian constitution by overthrowing the democratically elected government of His Excellency Shehu Aliyu Shagari (GCFR) via a coup d'etat, Major General Muhammadu Buhari still showed, and continues to show interest in becoming the president of Nigeria, then, there can be no other explanation for his actions apart from personal ambition. Period!

Just like Ibrahim Gbadamosi Babangida, Olusegun Okikiolakan Obasanjo, David Mark, et al, Muhammadu Buhari is the product of a cabal of power sadists that were hatched in the barracks of the Nigerian armed forces in post-civil war Nigeria. Chikena!

Muchas gracias.

Don Juan-Carlos ABRAXAS
(III)

Posted by Abraxas| 08.07.2007 03:02

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EnforcerEnforcer is offline 
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 # 4

This is an absurd claim. The years of the military regimes in Nigeria are wasted opportunities for Nigeria to evolve as a nation.

I am saddened that in spite of the atrocities and rape of our nation committed by the likes of Babaginda they are still given opportunities to lord it over us.

Look at shameless Buhari, rushing to the election tribunal to seek justice. Did he ever respect any court verdict when he was in power?

Posted by Enforcer| 08.07.2007 03:23

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TeeBlackTeeBlack is offline 
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 # 5

Buhari and Idiagbon being ousted from power was good riddance to bad rubbish. What, with all the flogging and beating of people who did not stay in line at the bus stop and all the falsehood which those two crazy soldiers shovel fed us? I even remember all the security wahala we were taken through during their time when the nation's currency was to be changed!! There was a certain custom office by the name of Atiku Abubakar who had noticed 55(?) suitcases of the new mint being ushered in by Buhari's ADC. It was supposedly for the Emir of somewhere. Nigerians never really forget. They just turn their faces in good faith. So can someone in this square please tell me the who missed the 'opportunities'? Nigerians or Buhari and Idiagbon?

Posted by TeeBlack| 08.07.2007 04:35

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Adeola AderounmuAdeola Aderounmu is offline 
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 # 6

Dear Max,

Please clarify if Buhari is from Sokoto or Katsina. Read between the lines and correct your double talk. Maybe he is not even a Nigerian! We are used to hearing that our military spoilers are foreigners.


We did not miss any opportunity in any military regime. The function of the military is to defend the country and not governance.


It should be possible to instil discipline in the society without the use of force. It is a question of good leadership: one with purpose, vision and mission. This is the problem we have in Nigeria.

We can actually make Nigerian great if our present puppet can, for example, get our monies back from Buhari and others who enriched themselves in the evil regime.

Our puppet can also be golden if he put Babangida on trial for stealing our money esp during the gulf war.

Doing things right under a democratic dispensation is the ONLY way to greatness.

I will say again that if we ignore the past in the present, the future of Nigeria WILL NEVER be GREAT

Put all the thieves on trial, prosceute all corrupt past and present politicians, put them to jail, rights all wrong (or as many as possible), set the society on merits and not federal character, give the job to the best man....

We don't need a military rule or style.

May the Glory of Nigeria come, soon!

http://aderinola.wordpress.com/

aderounmu@gmail.com

Posted by Adeola Aderounmu| 08.07.2007 09:24

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tengallonstengallons is offline 
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 # 7

I've enjoyed Siollum's straight historical essays, but this analytical piece is something else. While I will concede that Nigeria needed resolute leadership after the rudderless Shagari administration, Buhari's tenure was heavy on brute discipline and short on vision. That administration (and by extension, the military) was arrogant and disrespectful to the point of cowing Nigerians. That is not how to prepare the ground for the return the democracy. As far as I am concerned, they did violence to our collective psyche. Fighting corruption is one thing, but it is quite another to chart sophisticated routes to grow the economy, expand democratic space, and generally develop the nation. Buhari et al were drill sergeants, not statesmen. At the end of the day we had Bonaparte without Bonapartism.

Posted by tengallons| 08.07.2007 09:56

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ExxcuzmeExxcuzme is offline 
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 # 8


=Author>many of Nigeria’s print houses were then owned by the multi-billionaire businessman/politician: the late Moshood Abiola).

Loss of the South

.




How many print media were those? Newswatch and Concord......what others?

Posted by Exxcuzme| 08.07.2007 12:18

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chubrockchubrock is offline 
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 # 9

Like it or not. Buhari is not corrupt and does not tolerate corruption. Which a major issue for Nigeria. This came from Obasanjo himself . Anytime, the issue of corruption crops up, the only ammunition his critics have is the issue of 53 suitcases coming through lagos airport on a domestic flight. The accusation that he is religiously or ethnically biased has never come from anyone he has worked with. Seeing that his entire career is in the public sector wouldnt that have manifested? Buhari is not in the good books of the press period. But I do not have any doubts as to him being better than OBJ or Yaradua. Yaradua is just proving to be another Shagari, a reluctant puppet with no teeth. I hope I am proven wrong for the sake of the masses. But nothing has happened yet.

Posted by chubrock| 08.07.2007 12:36

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ZanderlexZanderlex is offline 
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 # 10

LACK OF INERTIA TO ENFORCE THE LAW IS THE MAJOR PROBLEM OF THE NIGERIAN SYSTEM. Buhari is a great Nigerian who has the will to enforce the rules in a sound economic, political and social policies. He has made his mistakes but still remains one of the best options for Nigeria. He remains incorruptible. He has vision for a prosperous Nigeria. This guy is honest and disciplined. He is a great patriot, a true nigerian with fear of God. Look gentlemen you cannot castigate this man and his deputy Tunde Idiagbon and expect to get my support because I was there when it happened. This man realized his mistakes and has been taking measures to fix it. However am not sure if he is a completely reformed democrat. An example is that I expected him to join his party ANPP in the bad majority decision to work with the illegitimate government of Yaradua because that is what democracy is all about.............Majority carries the vote. Anyway he has an option to quit or reform the party if it does not conform to the principles which he believes in.

Posted by Zanderlex| 08.07.2007 13:35

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