The Nigerian finance minister, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, was the guest of Christian Amanpour
Iweala on Amanpour |
Ekiti: unprecedented in Nigeria |
If the APC does this, it will be fielding a Muslim-Muslim ticket and that is just plain political suicide. I do not have any problem with a Muslim-Muslim ticket but a lot of Nigerians, whose votes will make the ultimate decision of who becomes president of Nigeria, do have a problem with it. At the moment in the political life of our country, two primary things determine who people vote for: it is where they come from (tribal) and what religion they profess. In a country that is predominantly Muslim and Christian, a Muslim-Muslim ticket is certain to discourage the Christian populace, and the ruling party, the PDP, will simply play on this political error and field a Christian-Muslim ticket. They will split the votes that would originally have gone to the APC and then garner the votes of those who would naturally have voted for them. The result will be the greatest defeat that General Buhari has ever witnessed in his political career and no one would be blamed for this than himself and his political associates. It is simply not done. If indeed the reports going around about the APC desiring to field a Buhari-Tinubu ticket is true, it is my candid plea with them to shelve it. A Muslim-Muslim ticket could have been permissible for the ACN in 2011
Buhari, Tinubu, Fayemi |
If on one hand, the ruling party has run out of ideas on how to solve the nation’s troubles and the leading opposition party will allow ambition and personal political agendas to colour its decisions, then the country is left at the mercy of the situations on ground and therefore the need for all Nigerians to pray hard to God to save the nation. While discussing this dilemma with a friend, he suggested the option of a military take over. I reminded him that a military rule will come with too many uncertainties. The whole country will then be at the mercy of the whims and caprices of one man or a group of men. As wobbling as our democracy is, we can still debate issues and still sway our leaders through popular public opinion. In a military rule, such cannot happen. Then we considered the outcome of the Nation Conference and how it could help solve some of the trouble with the nation. But even that one has its challenges because the outcome of that conference will still be vetted by the present national assembly that many Nigerians do not trust. When we had gone through all the options, and the situation looked bleak in every direction, we resorted to the God option.
Some people frown at the God option because they feel that it encourages lethargy, discourages people from taking responsibility for their actions and encourages resignation to fate. This is not exactly true. A true believer in God knows that God holds human beings responsible for their actions. So that nations that refused to learn from history and chose certain paths, along with their leaders, are today in prolonged war situations. It’s a simple principle of sowing and reaping. Nevertheless, those of us who believe in God understand that regardless of our efforts and even decisions, there is a God who chooses to show mercy on all of his creation and ensures that
things work out for them. This is the reason Nigerians must turn to God to save this country from imminent collapse. God can do all things. He may give to our present leaders such wisdom and ability to be able to solve the problems of this country, so that by 2015 when Nigerians go to the poles, they would have no qualms re-electing the present government into power. God can choose to ensure that the process of choosing a presidential candidate within the APC is so well organized that, far beyond our ability to reason it out, God can raise up such pristine, sound and visionary individuals within that party who will sell such an agenda to the Nigerian people such that they would not find it difficult to elect him to office. And lastly, God can go beyond the incumbent and the opposition, and bring for this country a redemption that only God can bring. When in the summer of 1998 the maximum ruler of this country, Sanni Abacha, suddenly died and in a space of weeks the leadership of this nation was changed, those of us who were praying were not surprised at all. That same God is alive and well, and can turn situation around as abruptly as he did in 1998.
At the moment, Nigeria is on auto-pilot. The blessing of such a situation for a plane is that the plane will continue to move, without any input from its pilot. The pilot may choose to go to sleep; the plane will continue to move. The problem with auto-pilot, however, is that if the plane continues in this state for too long a time and it runs out of gas, rather than continue in its flight, it would simply nose dive and crash. The trouble with a Nigeria on auto-pilot is that our situation has a time span. It is my prayer that we find solutions to our problems as a nation before our time elapses and the country self destructs.