close
Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Nigerians will miss Buhari after 2023: Ex-Minister

“Under Buhari, we have seen former governors, ministers, senators convicted and sent to jail, and Mr President has not pardoned them,” he said.

• October 6, 2021
President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo

Yerima Abdullahi, a former education minister, says millions of Nigerians will miss President Muhammadu Buhari when he leaves office in 2023.

“I will miss Buhari after 2023, and there are millions of Nigerians who will because when he says it is white, it is white, and when he says it is black, it is black,” said Mr Abdullahi on Tuesday in Gombe. “You don’t have so many of such leaders in the country. He is not a ‘Maradona’; he is not. He says things the way they are. It is very rare you find a leader with such courage.”

The former minister further noted that Mr Buhari had developed the country and should remain focused amid hunger, unemployment and skyrocketing food prices.

“Whether you like him or not, you have to accept that Buhari has really done well for the country and has been through a lot to serve the nation,” Mr Abdullahi insisted.

He further stated that Mr Buhari, often described by his critics as incompetent and taciturn, possessed leadership qualities lacking in most Nigerian leaders.

Mr Abdullahi added that the president’s sincerity had helped in laying a strong foundation for the advancement of democracy and good governance in Nigeria.

“Those that are condemning Buhari are not doing so because he is under-performing. They are doing so because he is Buhari. Most of those fighting Buhari and his administration are doing so for self-preservation. There are also others who have a hangover of his previous military experience and refused to accept that he is now a democrat,” asserted the ex-minister.

But he reiterated that many Nigerians at the grassroots would miss Mr Buhari after his tenure expired.

“We are not talking about that small group of people, but the majority of Nigerians at the grassroots will miss the leadership qualities of the president,” Mr Abdullahi noted. “We are talking about those that have benefitted from the several social investment programmes, farmers, and many more who have felt the impact of good governance under his administration.”

Mr Abdullahi lauded the anti-corruption war of Mr Buhari’s regime, claiming that many important personalities have been convicted of corruption.

“Under Buhari, we have seen former governors, ministers, senators convicted and sent to jail, and Mr President has not pardoned them,” he said.

(NAN)

More from Peoples Gazette

Northern governors

NationWide

Northerners campaigning for southern presidential candidates are traitors: Northern Coalition

Northern youths have threatened to expose northern politicians pocketing money to campaign for southern presidential candidates, calling them traitors.

World

Tesla to pay ex-worker $137 million for racial abuse

Tesla will pay the multimillion-dollar fine to ex-staff Owen Diaz for allowing racial abuse to fester at its auto plant in Fremont, California.

States

Gov. Diri frees criminals, worried pardon won’t decongest prisons if crime persists

Governor Douye Diri has granted amnesty to nine inmates of the Nigeria Correctional Centre, Okaka, in Yenagoa, the State capital.

Africa

Sixty thousand Rwandan students fail exams, to repeat

According to Uganda’s New Times, out of 251,906 candidates that participated in the 2019-2020 PLE exams, 60,842 failed.

Lantern light and Powergrid used to illustrate the story

Lagos

Ikeja DisCo announces 10-hour blackout in Magodo, Ikeja GRA, Oregun, others for eight weeks

Mr Ayeni noted that the outage was for upgrading the 132kv lines by the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) and would be between 8:00 a.m and 6:00 p.m. daily.

Rights

One in 10 people who need palliative care gets it: WHO

For WHO, “palliative care is a human right and a moral imperative of all health systems.”