Thursday, March 28, 2024

Ten tender questions for Bola Tinubu at Chatham House

The ruling party’s presidential candidate has repeatedly avoided taking direct questions on the campaign trail.

• December 5, 2022
Bola Ahmed Tinubu
Bola Ahmed Tinubu

1.   The world Cup is going on in Qatar. Nigeria’s national team, the Super Eagles, is not there. A primary reason the Nigerian team did not make it was the penchant of the Nigerian Football Association to ignore excellence, competence, and dedication for nepotism, quota system, federal character, and “it’s my turn” ism. 

In some cases, players have bribed officials to be selected. There are several reports of top government leaders forcing coaches to name particular players to the national team when more deserving players, in better form, are available and ready to represent Nigeria. That lack of a merit-based selection process shows whenever Nigeria goes out there to compete for a spot at the World Cup. 

In “The Trouble with Nigeria,” Chinua Achebe put it this way: he wrote that Nigeria fields not our first eleven or even second eleven but something like our eleventh eleven. Looking at all the primary candidates who contested to be the flag-bearer of the All Progressive Congress party in this election, are you the brightest crayon in the pack, the player in the best form, or are you the one who has the means and the regalia of the Nigerian factors to be selected?

2.   You came to Chatham House, an independent foreign Think Tank, to talk to the British people. Still, you have yet to speak to the Nigerian people through independent Nigerian media. You avoided Kadaria Ahmed’s The Candidates interview series. So far, you have cooked up reasons not to be part of any of AriseTV’s Town Hall meetings of presidential candidates backed by over two-dozen media and civil society organisations. Some people think you value Europeans more than the citizens of Nigeria that you want to govern. Do you suffer from an inferiority complex, or are you battling a debilitating colonial messianic complex?

3.   You have said that you chose your running mate based on competence. It means that you value competence above representation. The pushback over your decision to go for a Muslim-Muslim ticket in Nigeria, where religious tension is at its highest point in history, is unprecedented. In your appearance before the Christian Association of Nigeria, you tried to assure them that your government would be fair to everyone in Nigeria. If you fall short in this lifetime quest to be president and the exit poll shows that the Muslim-Muslim ticket is the determining factor, who will you blame?

4.   After seven years of President Muhammadu Buhari, Nigerians have now agreed on one thing: we must know who will be our next president before we vote for them. So, who is Bola Tinubu? Have you claimed to be who you are not at any time in your life? Have you, for instance, adopted someone who is not your mother as your mother? Have you answered a different name other than Bola Ahmed Tinubu? Have you used a different date of birth at any time? Based on your bio-data, name, and general biography, there are several Bola Tinubus in the public space. Which Bola Tinubu is the right Bola Tinubu?

5.   South African president, Cyril Ramaphosa, is in trouble for money missing from his own farm. He is a rich man like you who became president. But unlike you, the sources of his wealth are clear to South Africans. Records of Alpha Beta transactions that the press made public recently tied the company collecting taxes for Lagos State to other companies associated with you. 

Before you settled out-of-court your differences with him, the company’s former managing director, Dapo Apara, also connected you to the company. When are you going to come clean about your association with Alpha Beta? When you, as the governor of Lagos, asked the current Vice President Yemi Osinbajo to head the panel that awarded that lucrative contract to Alpha Beta, did you not see the conflict of interest? Will you sign a privacy release form to allow Osinbajo to tell Nigerians all he knows about Alpha Beta?  

6. We wish you long life and excellent health. But we know that anybody can die anytime, the old and the young, the healthy and the sick. If you win this election on February 25th, 2023, and die before you complete your term, your running mate, Kashim Shettima, will take over. For some Nigerians who have followed the political career of your running mate, Shettima’s presidency is the worst nightmare imaginable. 

Do the fears of these Nigerians concern you, or did you dismiss it the same way you rejected the concerns of those worried about a Muslim-Muslim ticket in a religiously polarised Nigeria?

7. Tomorrow, The Sun newspaper in the UK can publish the details of your medical history on its front pages. It is a matter of when the paper will receive the leaked information from your doctors’ offices abroad. Maybe by now, some foreign secret agencies have them. Are you not concerned about that possibility? If you are, why did you spend eight years as governor of Lagos State without building a hospital that you will safely go to for medical treatment? If you are not, God help us.

8. In 1993, the Justice Department settled a drug case you were associated with in Chicago, USA. Were you embarrassed about your involvement in that affair? Do you understand why Nigerians are demanding an explanation from you? Do you sympathise with Nigerians who look at you and wonder if you are a crook?

9. Please complete this statement: Being president of Nigeria is all about …? We assume you have it. Does Buhari have it? Which other past president had it? If they had it, why has Nigerian been progressively worse?

10. What would you say if a Nigerian stood before you now and said the following? “In 2022, we, Nigerians, think that being president of Nigeria is all about character. And based on all the convoluted and obfuscated answers you gave to the questions that Nigerians have asked you today, there is no doubt that you do not have the character to be Nigeria’s president at this time. We’ll let history decide if you ever had the character to be president at any time.”

Rudolf Ogoo Okonkwo teaches Post-Colonial African History at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. He is also the host of Dr. Damages Show. His books include “This American Life Sef” and “Children of a Retired God,” among others.

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