A close relation has just lost an opportunity to secure a visa to the United Arab Emirates because he is a Nigerian. In December, the chap got an offer from a university in the UAE for both PhD and scholarship, and had gone through all the processes of registration, writing a TOEFL examination and police clearance back home. All was set, including access to his portal and was already chatting with his professors before his visa request was denied.
As depressing as this is, there are many more out there who are in dire situation of health crisis, whose visa requests have been denied. Apart from the atrocious activities of a few Nigerian travellers to the UAE, giving us a bad name, such as cultism, drug peddling, and internet fraud, leading to tourist visa ban on persons less than 40 years old, there is also the issue of Emirates Airlines’ inability to repatriate the sum of $85 million trapped in Nigeria, after the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCCA) “implemented fines for international carriers using a currency other than the Naira to sell flight tickets amid foreign currency shortages”, contrary to “contractual obligation”. Patriotism? Well, it is open to interpretations.
It seems more of an unbridled ego-trip by Buhari’s untouchable aviation minister, Hadi Sirika and his ilks than anything else.
The mismanagement of the currency swap might have been the last straw that broke the camel’s back in the diplomatic row between the UAE and Nigeria but the Aviation Minister, Hadi Sirika who is in charge of that sector has not discharged his duties creditably. The reputation crisis created from all these are rubbing off on innocent Nigerians in their career progression including their educational pursuits. Yet, the minister has never been upbraided; he’s always had his way, and his word is law. All his memos to the (FEC), has always been approved, without questions.
As early as last week, at the end of the Federal Executive Council meeting, he announced another N2.29B approval he got from FEC for the assembling of Hungarian Magnus light aircraft at the Nigeria Aviation College of Technology, in Zaria. The “spin recovery aircraft” will be involved in the training of military and civilian pilots. He also stated that “this will happen, I think the first one or two aircraft will happen, (the assemblage here in Nigeria) and to fly them within the remaining four months that we have as a government. So, it’s another item that is ticked on our plate, and to which we remain grateful to President Muhammadu Buhari and his government”. If this item is ‘ticked’ for the minister in terms of contract award, how is it ticked for the Nigerian people at the mercy of a lame duck government that has only four months to leave office?
In July 2022, Minister Sirika announced that Nigeria Air would commence operations soon with three leased planes, stating that the national carrier will start with domestic flights with a mixture of airbus and Boeings. That ‘soon’ is yet to come less than 4 months into their exit. Nigeria Air has since run into troubled waters and litigations on it are ongoing, but the questions are: Will the minister be able to deliver Nigeria Air and get it off ground than online despite the millions of dollars spent on designing the logo alone? Why does the Buhari government consistently indulge some people in his administration even when they have not performed maximally. They say he (the President) trusts easily, but why trust and extend the tenures of people not adding much value to your government? With so many qualified Nigerians, why extend the tenures of government officials that are statute barred?
The latest controversy over tenure extension is about the Inspector General of Police (IGP) Usman Alkali Baba, who going by the public service rule of 35 years in service or 60 years of age, ought to exit on March 1. He however has had his tenure elongated because the Minister of Police Affairs, Mohammed Dingyadi has stated that the IGP’s appointment was for four years, quoting the Police Act, and contrary to tradition. In 2019, the tenure of the then IGP was also elongated because of election. The action then, as it is now, denied many people in line of succession, the opportunity to get to the peak of their careers.
Meanwhile, the IGP’s case is just the latest in the strings of stay-put government officials as has been enacted since Buhari came as president almost eight years ago. Since 1999, this is about the first time a president has kept ministers throughout his eight years in office and has constantly renewed the tenures of heads of parastatals and MDAs whose terms have expired even where most of them have failed to perform well.
The Ministers of Finance, Zainab Ahmed; Works and Housing, Babatunde Fahola; Aviation, Hadi Sirika; Education, Adamu Adamu; Interior, Rauf Aregbesola; FCT, Mohammed Bello and a host of others who have been around since the inception of this government are some examples. If you can’t fire a person, why hire him in the first instance.
Recall that it took the intervention of civil society protests and the media before the former security chiefs in the persons of Chief of Army staff, General Tukur Yusuf Buratai; Chief of Defence Staff, General Abayomi Olonisakin; Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Baba Abubakar and Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Ibok-Ete Ibas were relieved of their positions as service chiefs. And as if there is a dearth of qualified career and non-career diplomats and the president was liable to them, they were given other high-profile designations as ambassadors, even as they seemed weary and fatigued and had crossed the statutory age of 60 and 35 years in office, reminiscent of monarchical and dictatorial governments.
Again, this is unprecedented No appointees had enjoyed such privilege in recent past. The National Security Adviser (NSA), Mohammed Babagana Monguno (rtd) and Customs boss, Hameed Ali have been in office since 2015.
The same tenure extension scenario once played out at Immigration, Road Safety Commission, NSCDC, Prisons, Nigeria Import Promotion Council before wise counsel prevailed or so it seemed then.
All these happened (still happening) not because of superlative performances of these super appointees, but in spite of it, coupled with ineptitude, cronyism and negligence by the authorities. Besides, this can only happen under a Buhari Presidency without backlash, pushback or consequences.
The Prime Minister of New Zealand, Jacinda Ardern has just announced she was exiting because of what she referenced as“burn out”, a period when you have run short of ideas and have become less creative and enthusiastic in your work (emphasis mine), yet she is much younger than all these appointees in Nigeria. “I’m leaving because with such privileged role comes responsibility…And I know that I no longer have enough in the tank to do it justice”, Ardern said. Can we ever develop to this level?
Zainab Suleiman Okino chairs the Editorial Board of Blueprint. She is a syndicated columnist. She can be reached via zainabokino@gmail.com