Buhari jailed my father but he can offer Nigeria a fresh start By Lola Shoneyin

APC presidential candidate Muhammadu Buhari meets with U.S Secretary of State Kerry at the U.S. consulate house in Lagos

Possibly the worst year of my life was 1984. I was 10 years old and blissfully unaware of the changing face of Nigeria’s political land­scape. And a rather unyielding face it was – that of Muhammadu Buhari who had recently over­thrown Shehu Shagari, a demo­cratically elected president. For Buhari, this was a necessary coup d’etat because Nigeria was being overrun by corrupt politi­cians. However, his regime would have a devastating impact on my family’s fortunes.

For the first time, at the close of the school term in Edinburgh, my father wasn’t there to pick us up. My older brother, aged 15, took charge and we made our way to Heathrow. Touching down in Ni­geria, it was my mother who met us at the airport. She didn’t smile, perhaps couldn’t; her mouth was turned down at the corners like she was being flattened by existence. Something was wrong, clearly. I waited until we were settled in the car and piped up: “Where’s Dad­dy?” Without turning to glance at me, my mother answered: “He’s in jail.” She always had an aversion to bullshit but even, for her, that was pretty cold. For the rest of the journey, I thought about my Daddy who returned the cash to the phone company when our account was credited with thousands of naira; Daddy who, born into abject pov­erty, personified what it meant to work really hard and make your own dreams come true, in a hope­fully new meritocratic Nigeria.

On getting home, one of my older brothers explained that Bu­hari’s deputy, the uncompromis­ing, much-feared Colonel Tunde Idiagbon, had commanded that all government contractors in Ogun state had received a notice to ap­pear before a special committee. My dad honoured the invitation and presented all the papers to show that it was in fact the government that owed his company money. He was given two options: to pay a large amount (that no one quite un­derstood how they arrived at) or go to jail. On principle, my dad said he wasn’t going to pay money that he didn’t owe. He was not alone. I have a group of friends with whom I am forever bound by this shared ordeal of seeing our fathers treated like criminals. And as it was for many, this period signified the beginning of financial ruin.

My father spent six months in jail and came out a different man. For one, he started clapping at our sol­emn family devotion in the morn­ings, something we never did. He explained that that was what they did in prison. He was never a big talker but seeing him work at ad­justing to normal life was painful for everyone around him.

Before his release, the two giant crushers and all the machinery and equipment that belonged to his civil engineering firm were liquidated. As children, our lives changed too. We were placed in state schools and said goodbye to our privileged life­styles.

My dad is 87 now and he’s an ac­tive member of the local advisory board of the All Progressive party, the opposition party that has re­cently adopted Buhari as the presi­dential flag-bearer, 30 years after his first outing as a military head of state. Like many Nigerians, my father was saddened when he heard President Goodluck Jonathan claim that “stealing is not corruption”. With 24% unemployment, there are limited opportunities for young people, making them easy fodder for militants in the southernmost parts of the country and dreaded religious fundamentalists in the north. People clamour for leader­ship.

For the last three weeks, I have been travelling with the presiden­tial campaign team and I have had the opportunity to listen to people and interview them. I have also had a personal need to understand this man Buhari who has run for the highest office a record three times. At the beginning, I admit I had doubts and misgivings. It’s hard not to when you’ve been stung before. But after several conversa­tions with him, I have come to un­derstand what the mass hysteria is all about and why Nigerians would vote for this soft-spoken but highly principled 72-year-old.

It’s quite simple and, having worked as a schoolteacher for years, I can use a school setting in my anal­ogy. Kids like a teacher to whom they can give the runaround but when it’s crunch time, they favour an environment where the teacher is firm, one where clear boundaries have been set. Having a president who is widely described as “clue­less” may have seemed to many like an opportunity, but the goodwill that Jonathan enjoyed in 2011 has been frittered away. These days, governors in the opposition parties are starved of funds and harassed when they don’t do the bidding of a First Lady who campaigns for her personal candidates. Many Nigeri­ans believe that it is time to return to one of the few faces of anti-cor­ruption in Nigeria’s political his­tory. Even my wrongly-imprisoned Dad would recognise that Buhari’s ambition was to stem corruption.

Unlike many Nigerian past presidents, Major-General Buhari does not have a huge mansion. You won’t hear about him owning a bank or sitting on the board of banks. Neither does he own expan­sive farmland. In fact, he wrote to the minister of finance requesting that he only receive 10% of the al­lowance that all past presidents receive on a monthly basis. Over­whelmingly, his lack of greed and personal venality means people trust him. Within a democratic dis­pensation, whatever excesses Bu­hari’s singlemindedness at tackling corruption might have shown 30 years ago can and will be curbed.

He has surrounded himself with a brilliant, savvy team of young Ni­gerians and I much enjoy the pas­sion with which he talks about his three main priorities: unemploy­ment, insecurity and education. For some Nigerians, he might not be an ideal candidate but for many more, people want anything but Jona­than. And even better it’s someone that they feel they can believe in.

SUN

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