APC in the land of ‘Fabu’
FABU” is a Yoruba slang denoting an exaggerated lie. It points to a tall tale; a gross distortion of the truth. “Fabu” is a shortened form of the English word “fabulate,” which refers to the composition of fables or stories featuring a strong element of fantasy and lies. Without a doubt, within the Nigerian political stratosphere, APC is a party that lives in “fabuland.”
Art of fabulation: The chief exponent of APC
fabulation is Lai Mohammed. He was formerly the party’s National
Publicity Secretary, a post in which he distinguished himself. This has
now earned him promotion to the post of Minister of Information and
Culture. In this new capacity, Mohammed has already begun to fine-tune
his art of fabulation. No sooner had he become Minister than he went
ahead to tell Nigerians that fuel scarcity would soon be a thing of the
past.
These are his words delivered with characteristic aplomb at the Abuja
office of Daily Trust newspapers on 2 December, 2015: “We can
confidently announce here today that the (fuel) scarcity will end in a
few days. The National Assembly has approved subsidy payment till the
end of the year. As you know, we can’t spend money without approval. We
can assure you that we won’t be caught in this kind of situation again.”
They call this kind of “fabu” “famous last words.” Anyone living in
Nigeria this Christmas season can bear witness to the extent to which
Mohammed’s words have originated from APC’s fantasy fabuland. In Lagos,
for example, the roads are completely clogged like at no other time
because they have been overtaken by cars queuing for fuel. More than
ever before, it now takes literally hours on end to go from A to B.
Confusion galore
Ibe Kachikwu, the Minister of State for Petroleum, has quickly come
out with another pie-in-the-sky from APC’s “fabuland,” conveniently
changing Mohammed’s fabulous goalpost without even batting an eyelid.
Speaking to the party’s big-guns from Delta State, Kachikwu promises to
bring about fundamental changes in Nigeria’s oil sector not before the
end of 2015, but before the end of 2016.
Hear him: “The country’s oil sector will experience a turnaround such
that the refineries will work effectively and products will be made
available to the people at an affordable price within 365 days.”
You begin to wonder whether APC members even bother to coordinate
their own fabulations. Would any right-thinking Nigerian buy a used car
from any member of the APC today? I doubt it! Apparently, the
government has determined that we should fill our tanks with “fabu”
instead of petrol this holiday season. What does this mean for those
planning to travel home for Christmas and the New Year?
Non-existent petrol subsidy
During the heated debate in 2012, when President Jonathan sought to
remove the petroleum subsidy, the APC championed national revolt against
the government. People occupied the streets and the government was
forced to back down. General Buhari came out to tell Nigerians that the
whole issue of petroleum subsidy was one big government scam.
He said: “I don’t understand what the Nigerian economists and the
members of the government are calling subsidy. Who is subsidising who?
If anybody says he is subsidising anything, it is a fraud. So all these
people talking about subsidy; who is subsidising who?”
But now that Buhari is not only president, but also the unofficial
Minister of Petroleum Resources; the subsidy is apparently no longer
fraudulent. His position now is that this “fraud” is in the interest of
Nigerians. Speaking at a briefing by the petroleum ministry on 13
July, 2015, the president said:
“I have received many literature on the need to remove subsidies, but
much of it has no depth. When you touch the price of petroleum
products; that has the effect of triggering price rises on
transportation, food and rents. That is for those who earn salaries,
but there are many who are jobless and will be affected by it.”
We may well ask why Mr. President is now trying to defend and retain
something he claimed was fraudulent and even non-existent. “Who is now
subsidising who?”
“Buhari tax”: Under Jonathan, Senator Bola Tinubu,
the so-called National Leader of the APC, rallied Nigerians against the
removal of the petroleum subsidy. He castigated the government’s
attempt to remove the subsidy as a wicked tool designed to impoverish
Nigerians. These were his words:
“As there is progressive politics, there is progressive economics. As
there is elitist politics, there is elitist economics. It all depends
on what and who in society government would rather favour. The Jonathan
tax represents a new standard in elitism. Because he is slave to
wrong-headed economics the people will become enslaved to greater
misery.
Same petroleum subsidy
This crisis will bear his name and will be his legacy. The people now
pay a steep tax for voting him into office. The removal of the subsidy
is the ‘Jonathan tax.’”
But now that the APC is in power, Tinubu is calling for the removal
of the same petroleum subsidy he lampooned Jonathan for trying to
remove. Speaking at the memorial anniversary of the passing of the late
Bala Usman on 18 December, 2015, Tinubu said:
“I have reached the conclusion that there are too many demons in the
system for that hell to be turned into heaven. It is better that we
remove it, not for the austere purpose of saving money but to use the
money more wisely that we might better save the people. Let us begin a
process of a thoughtful, but decisive subsidy phase-out.”
What are we to make of this hypocrisy? According to Tinubu, the
removal of the petroleum subsidy under the PDP would amount to a
Jonathan tax designed to enslave the people to greater misery. But
under the APC, the removal of the subsidy would be a Buhari tax that
would save the people. Which of these “fabu” are we supposed to
believe? I repeat, can any right-thinking Nigerian buy a used car from
any APC member today?
The end of Boko Haram: In an interview with
Christiane Amanpour of CNN, Buhari boasted he would defeat Boko Haram
within two months if elected president. This was how the “fabu” was
expressed at the time: “We know how they started and where they are now
and we will rapidly give attention to security in the country. And I
believe we will effectively deal with them in two months when we get
into office.”But once elected, the president insisted this “fabu” was
the creation of his opponents. He said: “I think I am too experienced
in internal security to give two months deadline on Boko Haram. I don’t
think I would have made that statement. I didn’t.”
Nevertheless, the president could not resist coming up with another
“fabu” to replace the earlier one. At a meeting in October 2015 with
General Rodriguez, Commander of the United States’ Africa Command, the
same President Buhari who said he could not have declared it would take
only two months to defeat Boko Haram, now said the insurgency would be
defeated in three months.
Structured attacks
Hear him: “Structured attacks by the insurgents have reduced and by
the end of the year, we should see the final routing of Boko Haram as an
organised fighting force.” He again reiterated this “fabu” on Al
Jazeera’s Up Front magazine: “As soon as the rainy season comes (to an
end), which is by the end of the year, Boko Haram will virtually be out
of their main stronghold and that will be the end of it.”
Only God knows why the president finds it necessary to come out with
this kind of “fabu.” It is the kind of thing even the president of
superpower United States would not dare to make. However, our very own
APC members live permanently in fabuland. Their “fabus” are on
never-ending auto-pilot. They come one after the other and are never
impeded by reason, logic or even outright contradictions.
The government spends a lot of time coming up with “fabus,” denying
them, defending them and varnishing them. The president has even found
it necessary to reassure his teeming supporters that he will not resign
because a “fabu” is discovered incontrovertibly to be a “fabu.” He
told Al Jazeera’s Mehdi Hasan that if Boko Haram is not defeated by
December: “I will not resign.”
But why declare the “fabu” in the first place if it can later be
ignored? The “fabu” is simply a hyperbole to be fed periodically to the
public, in lieu of concrete public policy.
Anti-corruption “fabu”
One of the biggest, if not the biggest, “fabu” of this APC government
is that it is fighting corruption when, in actual fact, anti-corruption
is merely an instrument for decimating the PDP and establishing a
one-party APC state. Today, APC carefully ignores its own corrupt
members while going after the PDP exclusively.
In order not to scare off dodgy members of his party with his
anti-corruption “fabu,” Buhari promised to let corrupt sleeping dogs lie
if elected: “A few people have privately voiced fears that on coming
back to office I shall go after them. These fears are groundless. There
will be no paying off old scores. The past is prologue,” he said.
He further elaborated on this at the APC campaign rally in Kaduna:
“Whoever that is indicted of corruption between 1999 to the time of
swearing-in, would be pardoned. I am going to draw a line, anybody who
involved himself in corruption after I assume office, will face the
music.”
But now that that “fabu” has fulfilled its purpose, it has been
conveniently jettisoned. Of course, APC members remain untouchable;
Buhari’s anti-corruption is now only applicable to the PDP. However, it
might not be so cut and dry as the president would like. Buhari
himself is implicated in the “fabu” of Dasukigate, which would have
Nigerians believe that while PDP used public funds illegally for
party-political purposes, the APC did not.
In July 2014, Buhari’s SUV was attacked and damaged. Two SUVs were
given to him to replace the damaged one. The two-for-one replacement
contravenes section 3(1) of the Remuneration of Former Presidents and
Heads of State Act of 2004. According to that Act, Buhari is not
entitled to any new vehicles until 2016; and certainly not from the
office of the NSA. We can expect to hear more “fabus” on this issue as
the case continues to go out of control.
Would any right-thinking Nigerian buy a used car from any member of
the APC today? Only Buharimaniacs still seem inclined to do so.
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