An Appraisal Of El-Rufai And His Epistles On Leadership By Godwin Onyeacholem

By Godwin Onyeacholem

The ongoing series in some publications titled “In Search Of Leadership” by the irrepressible Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai are, without doubt, an engaging read to which every conscious citizen ought to pay grave attention. Reason is that somehow the unnerving question of leadership in the open-ended debate – albeit unofficial – on how to salvage a country clearly perched on the edge of fragmentation, is steadily assuming a larger-than-life dimension.

At no time under this wangled democracy has the dialectics on leadership been more gripping, more encompassing, more tormenting and more insistent than this distressing moment. To that extent, El-Rufai is perfectly right to have weighed in with his perspectives on an issue that endlessly agitates the minds of genuine patriots who desire not just the survival of Nigeria, but also the deployment of her amazing potentials for progress in a more meaningful fashion.

Yet, there are some issues to confront in the submissions he has so far put in the public domain. They are randomly discussed in this piece both as a way of provoking further insights on leadership, and nudging memories towards appraising the role El-Rufai himself played as a leader in the civilian administration of the very recent past.

It is heart-warming that the former boss of the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) and later Minister of the Federal Capital Territory in the President Olusegun Obasanjo administration, duly acknowledges the proverb that a “fish starts to get rotten from the head”. Meaning: Nigeria’s worsening multi-faceted problem is the work of post-colonial leaders who have had the opportunity to grab power and govern the country over the years.

It is difficult to accept his theory that had the wobbling and floundering First Republic not been aborted by a military coup in 1966, the country’s stability would have been assured and the democratic culture would have taken firm root. Lodged in the DNA of an average Nigerian leader, it seems, is the proclivity for unremitting greed.

Rather than see an enlarged picture of a socio-cultural environment of equal opportunities, Nigerian leaders naturally envision a twisted, prohibitive space of incorporated corruption, where only they and their friends and associates steal from the commonwealth to enrich just themselves and their families.

Such is the level of greed – so much so that since 1966 there had been several opportunities to construct positive national ethos and move in an alternate direction that would have transformed the country in the mould of its contemporaries like Malaysia and Singapore, but the leaders stuck to their old grooves and the result as everyone can see is that the country has been the worse for it. Over the years there has been intense motion in all spheres of governance, but none indicating movement. Maybe, except, the military regimes of Murtala/Obasanjo and Muhammadu Buhari.

Of course, in recruiting leaders for these times, education, experience and pedigree are important as El-Rufai pointed out. But there are assets much more important than these which he failed to mention: ethical and moral standing. For instance, leadership conscription must focus more on values instead of academic qualifications and other considerations. As he himself knows, virtually all those perpetrating today’s unconscionable fraud, cornering millions, billions and trillions of public funds that could have been used to improve the lives of the people boast superb pedigrees and impeccable academic credentials.

If El-Rufai would be honest, in very many ways, many of those highly pedigreed and qualitatively educated young men and women like him who found themselves in government at different times have disappointed beyond description. This time out, Nigerians must “shine their eyes”.  They must now be guided more by the values their leaders embrace and promote, not whether he or she possesses a string of degrees. The absence in any society of leaders well-fortified by ethical and moral armour is bound to leave such a society in a state of anarchy, no matter how high the academic qualifications of the leaders.

That is exactly what is going on in Nigeria of today. The colossal ethical and moral deficit for which leaders of the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) have become notorious since 1999, has ensured that the country’s democracy remains nothing but a sham.

Unfortunately, El-Rufai and many others like him who are now moralising also exhibited a fair share of this deficit when they served in the administration of Obasanjo. Boldness and courage, two qualities he has enjoined Nigerians to look out for in selecting new leaders, failed him repeatedly when it most mattered.

Knowingly or unknowingly, together with equally articulate and well-informed men, like the former anti-graft czar, Nuhu Ribadu, and the combative, Femi Fani-Kayode, he rubbished and abandoned “transformational” leadership which with hindsight he now finds healthier, and championed and advanced the deleterious  “transactional” leadership of Obasanjo, which unarguably laid the foundation for what the Yoruba would call Awada kerikeri (comic entertainment) that now passes for governance at every level.

He talks about public service skills at the federal level as an ingredient for good leadership. I disagree. The real leader can come from anywhere. He or she does not have to have public service experience. In any case, the kind of public service that exists in Nigeria now has completely lost it. Nothing like “service” is going on in any of the public institutions. What goes on now in the name of public service is unrestrained stealing from the public purse.

But one totally agrees with him that with regard to the situation the country finds itself. We should “stop passing the buck to God”. After all, nowhere is it stated in any modern literature that God helped certain countries to fix their crumbled roads, rebuilt their dilapidated schools, equipped their hospitals, provided employment for their teeming jobless, ensured adequate water supply, built refineries, guaranteed constant electricity and then finally dropped down from the skies to organise elections that would be described as free, fair and credible in the eyes of normal people.

As he says, and he is in order, the envisaged leader should ignore all requests for state creation and recognise that something needs to be done about the current federal structure to ensure federalism in its proper name. However, rather sadly, El-Rufai seems comfortable with the amendment of a constitution that is nothing other than a military decree when a majority clearly favours the writing of a brand new, people-driven constitution that will draw up fresh protocols for co-existence of the diverse peoples of a new Nigeria.

Also, one does not think it’s in any way about “strong, dedicated advisers and inner circle” as he advocates. Nigerians saw it in the past and El-Rufai was in the thick of this clique. For one, it’s about the leader – the man or woman who steers the ship of state. What values do they believe in and want the people to imbibe? That is the key to taking the country out of the woods.

Godwin Onyeacholem, a journalist, can be reached at gonyeacholem@gmail.com and www.giraffemagazine.com.ng
 

 

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of SaharaReporters

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Poor student of Political science!

A good student of Political science understands that Nigeria has 36 states, and therefore, 36 leaders, who are not all in the PDP. So when people talk about the deficiencies of 'leaders', we shouldn't forget the 36 State Governors and 774 Local Govt Chairpersons. Our poor political science knowledge seem to suggest to us, even though we practice a Federalism, with powers and areas of jurisdiction clearly spelt out by the constitution, under exclusive, Concurrent and residual lists.

Finally, contrary to the writer's opinion, I posit that future leaders must be educated, enlightened and exposed. The complexities of governance are way beyond an illiterate or uneducated leader. Times have gone beyond those days. Not necessarily a Ph.d or Masters degree holder, but they must have a good University education (or equivalent) as a minimum. They must also have a past and some history that we can compare or appraise.

No 'whitewash' of Buhari, pls!

I object to the 'whitewash' of Buhari, who usurped power and jailed indiscriminately without trial. The writer is lucky not to have been a journalist during Buhari's time, otherwise, he probably would have been history, or obliterated from the face of the earth by a 'retrospective law'.

And if, indeed, Buhari sowed a good seed, why did it disappear quickly? And why did he not re-enact this during his stint with Abacha, his co-tyrant? He even absolved Abacha of corruption, when it was glaring to the rest of the world that Abacha stank of corruption from head to toe. And his legacy lives even after his death.

Buhari is nothing but a criminal who would get his recompense, in due course, for 'armed' insurrection (or robbery) against an elected government (of Shagari) voted by the Nigerian people. A coup does not cease to be treasonable, simply because it was executed successfully, just as robbery does not become legal because a robber escapes JUSTICE.

Hypocrisy of El-Rufai!

The statements about the hypocrisy and 'holier-than-thou' preachment, or what I call the 'born-again' sermons, of El-Rufai, no longer wash with me. This includes Ribadu, and for the same reasons that the writer mentioned. I do not even bother to read them anymore, especially El-Rufai. He may well be making some senses, but he is the wrong messenger, I am afraid. You cannot give what you don't have. Apples do not fall far from its tree.

El-Rufai preaches his sermon against corruption, but waved off his sleaze in the land allocation scandal to members of his family. Corruption does not have to be as huge as $billion before it is classified as corruption. Corruption, no matter how little, has a minimum Jail term. That should be the fate of El-rufai (at least) and other proven cases of corrupt officials, whether present or former.

If you don’t know what a big fat ass lie is, how about......

If you don’t know what a big fat ass lie is, how about One Nigeria? Take emotion out, Nigeria is just a collection of tribes with no COMMON GOALS.

Ok, here is how to fix Nigeria. YOU DON’T. It does not need fixing. It is the giant of Africa. SNC please.

As for El-Rufai, he is the type of a person that mothers warn not to have anything to do with bcos, his crassness and disgusting behaviour would rub off on you. This guy served for eight years in OBJ regime and look at the country today. The regime that he was one of the inner circles promised to fix the power sector but failed to do so. The questions to El-Rufai,the OBJ hitman minister are…(1) if he lied to Nigerians. (2) Not smart enough to know that they could not do it.

El-Rufai and Ribadu Should Be Read Dismissively

I never waste my time reading El-Rufai nor Ribadu, they were the clowns that made the final adamant presentation to OBJ which saw the name of Peter Odili substituted with Dumbo's as VP to UMYA. That's how we're strapped with this incompetent leadership. Their treatise are aimed at remaining relevant. When both had their chances to impact with same things they're now writing episcles on, they blew it by wide margins. Look at Jega, he was all noise before joining INEC, now he's actively burning up data bases so he can start afresh with wasting our commonwealth. Thieves.

Nigeria needs to go back to the drawing tables. Discarding the junta-made constitution is a good beginning. SNC is a legitimate option. The country can be reduced to manageable entities. Otherwise, a revolution will be the final option. Enough of these write-ups. The Alarm Clock is set for 2015!

el-rufire

Ha ha ha na wa for we country o. I thought elrufire was part and parcel of FeeDeeFee na? he even confessed how himself and the great OBJ installed the amiable tea drinking-squash playing-Saudi travelling-while sick yar'adua(RIP).
is it not the same elrufire that allocated abuja plots to his family and girlfriends?
the same elrufire that wickedly drove out poor children and pregnant women from their homes without alternatives in the name of demolition.

elrufire, some of us have not contacted the infectious disease called amnesia....we have not forgotten... we are waiting for you!