Buhari's first year: Five ways Nigeria has changed
1. Are we safer?
Those of us who travel regularly in Nigeria’s north-east had become
used to what should be a 15-minute journey turning into an hour-long
ordeal.
You had to stop dozens of times at roadblocks and disembark, while
heavily armed soldiers inspected your vehicle for traces of the Islamist
militant group, Boko Haram.
Today, the number of checkpoints has fallen significantly - even on
the road to Chibok - thanks to enhanced confidence in the security of
the entire region.
The army has regained swathes of territory that the Islamist militants had occupied as part of their so-called caliphate.
Boko Haram has been considerably weakened, resigned to attacking soft targets using suicide bombers.
Thousands of women and girls kidnapped by the group have also been
rescued, including one of the 219 schoolgirls from Chibok abducted in
April 2014.
But while there is progress in the north-east, trouble in the Niger Delta, the country’s oil-producing region, is resurfacing.
Recent attacks on oil facilities have caused a drop in production and helped push up the global price of crude oil.
2. Where’s my money?
In the months preceding last year’s elections, the popular chant on
the streets was “Sai Buhari, Sai Buhari”, which means “Only Buhari” in
Hausa - the most widely-spoken language in the north where the
president originates.
“Sai Buhari” became an almost magical greeting, capable of earning
you a discount from the sweaty chap pushing a wheelbarrow of tiger nuts
or sugar cane.
It could even elicit a smile followed by permission to move along,
from the miscellaneous airport officials who usually ensure that your
passage through Nigerian customs and immigration is fraught with
agonising delays.
A year later, the chant has changed to “Buhariya”, which roughly translates to “Buhari’s way” or “Buhari’s time”.
The slogan is now used to explain every unpleasant evidence of Nigeria’s troubled economy and a time of austerity.
“A basket of tomatoes has gone up from 3,000 naira ($15) to 18,000 naira?”
It’s “Buhariya!”
“How come the naira is plummeting against the dollar on the black market?”
It’s “Buhariya!”
3. Where’s our money?
This time last year, friendship with Sambo Dasuki, the former national
security adviser, could have altered your economic circumstances
forever.
He would have been besieged with invitation cards to be the chief guest at various events.
When he entered a room, almost everyone would stand in respect.
Today, he sits in an Abuja jail, awaiting trial for the alleged
mismanagement of billions of dollars meant for the war against Boko
Haram - charges he denies.
Several other big men, previous untouchables, such as former service
chiefs, top politicians and government officials, are also sitting in
jail awaiting corruption trials, or out on bail.
And, if you’re looking for a second-hand luxury car to buy, now may be the time.
A number of people formerly linked to the government are desperate for cash and selling off their fleets.
It would seem as though the leaking taps that gushed dollars to be
spent carelessly have stopped flowing since President Buhari came to
power.
4. Where are the women?
Ensuring women’s participation at all levels in political, economic
and public life is one of the targets of the UN’s sustainable
development goals (SDGs).
But only six out of Mr Buhari’s cabinet of 37 are women, a meagre 16% and way down on the previous administration’s 31%.
The president’s wife, Aisha, is also the most silent first lady
Nigeria has had in decades, barely seen or heard - except maybe when
she is visiting unkempt children in a refugee camp or donating food
items to victims of Boko Haram. She appears as the stereotypical good
African wife.
Her invisibility is suspicious when you consider that President
Buhari, during his election campaign, said he would abolish the office
of the first lady - but then retracted the suggestion when challenged
by feminist voters.
5. What are we wearing?
In Abuja the government in power influences the style of dress throughout the administration.
Staff of the government, friends of the government and aspiring friends
of the government all aim to dress like the person at the top.
Northerners ruled Nigeria for most of the country’s first three decades after independence from the UK in 1960.
Over time, their traditional outfits, babarigas (flowing gowns) and
kaftans, became firmly entrenched - even when a non-northerner was
elected in 1999.
Olusegun Obasanjo is an ethnic Yoruba from the south but throughout
his eight-year presidential tenure, he mostly wore babarigas.
Cartoons depicting a typical Nigerian “big man” will usually feature
him dressed in the flowing robes, his potbelly distorting the layers
of cloth.
All this changed in 2011, with the election of Goodluck Jonathan.
He was Nigeria’s first president from one of the country’s smaller
ethnic groups, and also the first from the oil-producing Niger Delta, in
the south.
Mr Jonathan preferred the long shirt and trouser outfit that is traditional among his Ijaw community.
Suddenly, the babariga was nowhere to be seen.
Government offices and hotel lobbies began to feature an inordinate
number of men dressed in the presidential style of the time.
Some even went as far as the fedora hats and walking sticks that go with the outfit.
Eventually, the style gained its own special nickname - “resource
control” - in reference to the fact that most people who wore it seemed
to be the ones controlling Nigeria’s oil resources.
Indeed, it seemed to be the preferred outfit of many of Nigeria’s newest millionaires.
Not any more. Within a year of Mr Buhari, “resource control” outfits
have almost completely vanished from view. The babariga is back.
Beyond these five areas, there are many more profound changes that
Nigerians are expecting from our government, but those will take time.
The structure of corruption and mismanagement which previous
governments left behind must first be dismantled before a new
foundation of progress can be laid.
And President Buhari is no modern-day Hercules.
Cleaning Nigeria’s equivalent of the fantastically filthy Augean stables of Greek myth is certainly not a one-year job.
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