The press released reads:
Our attention has been drawn to a statement by the Senior
Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu
in which he blamed the failure of President Muhammadu Buhari to appoint
ministers until six months after taking over office on the administration of
former President Dr. Goodluck Jonathan.
Speaking on a Channels television programe on Monday
December 17, Shehu had claimed that it took President Buhari who was sworn in
on May 29, 2015 until November 11, 2015 to appoint his ministers because the
“President was given handover notes 48 hours to the handover of power”. As
strange as that particular assertion may sound, it still beggars belief that a
spokesman of a President who is seeking re-election would still be looking for
a scapegoat for the administration’s failure, at a time he should be showcasing
his scorecard. That amounts to merely clutching at straws.
ne thing is as clear as daylight: The Jonathan
administration has absolutely nothing to do with the failure of this government
to appoint ministers early enough to inspire confidence in investors because it
is obvious that handover notes from a predecessor does not contain the list of
ministers for the incoming administration. However, that is even making light
of Garba Shehu’s unending embarrassing gaffe. It is expected that a man who has
been around the corridors of power for that long, beginning from when he served
as a media adviser under President Obasanjo for years, should understand
Government’s basic functions and procedures. Handover notes, being
transitioning documents, are usually received by an incoming President from his
predecessor at the time of change of government.
It is not a document that guides a President to appoint
his ministers. Under normal circumstances, a newly inaugurated President needs
the support of his ministers, who would handle different departments of
Government, to study and understand his handover notes for effective
performance of his initial duties. Those who think like Shehu that a Government
would not function properly if it does not receive handover notes in time,
should be reminded that there is no law establishing the process. It is simply
a matter of convenience for an outgoing President to develop handover notes to
guide his successor understand key issues and hit the ground running.
In his own case, former president Jonathan magnanimously
set up a transition team that produced the handover document which President
Buhari received ahead of his inauguration. Anyone who uses handover notes to
justify a President’s indiscretion of not appointing ministers until after
spending six months in power, is either being mischievous or does not really
understand governance processes.
Sometimes, when Mr. Shehu speaks, he comes across as
someone who is unaware of the fact that, under our laws, an administration is
elected for a tenure of four years within which it is expected to have
fulfilled its campaign promises, before returning to the electorates for a
fresh mandate. In case he does not know, Shehu should be reminded that blaming
others for one’s failures is not a prove of performance. Assuming, without out
conceding, that the last administration was as bad as they want Nigerians to
believe, is it not a fact of governance that it is the duty of every
responsible administration to seek to make better the situation it met on ground?
Anything less than that, is a prove of incompetence for which a failed
administration has no moral justification to ask for a fresh mandate.
While members of the current administration continue to
blame President Jonathan for their failure to deliver on their mandate, they
should be reminded that there are many African success stories that proved that
a progress-minded administration has no business focusing only on the past.
From past of the worst genocide in recent history, Rwandan President Paul
Kagame did not blame anybody when he took charge. He simply hit the ground
running, and today, we all know where Rwanda stands in Africa’s growth and
development index.
The story is similar in Cote d’Ivoire where President
Alassane Ouattara was able to turn around the Ivorian economy within two years
after it had virtually collapsed following the negative impact of the country’s
worst political crisis. As the Buhari Government nears its end, the minders of
the administration should please tell Nigerians what new projects, programmes
and institutions for good governance they have added to those established by
the various administrations of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), since they
took office on May 29, 2015. The truth is that this unhelpful blame game must
stop if we have to move forward as a nation.
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