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Sunday 14 February 2016

Murtala and the leadership question

“Every great achievement is a dream before it becomes reality,” says former American Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger. Kissinger was comment­ing on the miracle of Singapore, the tiny South Asian state that rose from poverty to prosperity.

A nation with no natural resources and a land mass of not more than 640sq km, has today become one of envy in the comity of nations. A nation that works for its people and the outside world, attracting thousands of tourists globally, who never stop marvelling at the dramatic turn-around in the fortunes of a people once hemmed in by more ambitious and prosperous neighbours like China and Indonesia, and derided as a place where no quality products or services could ever come from. A nation of fakes and the substan­dard.

But all that was yesterday. Today the new Singa­pore is the delight of visitors and the dream of every forward-looking nation. From engineering to the fi­nancial sector, jobs and entrepreneurial opportuni­ties, the country is a far cry from what it used to be.

The man who dreamt the big dream of achieve­ment; who turned his dream of a great nation to reality was Lee Kuan Yew. Undoubtedly its most charismat­ic leader to date, Lee Kuan Yew literally turned stone to bread; desert to savannah, and dust to gold. Singa­pore’s amazing rags-to-riches story, as widely known, is essentially the story of one man’s vision, and his bulldog tenacity to making things happen, leaving a worthy legacy for his people.

Lee Kuan Yew declares triumphantly, albeit boast­fully, in his expository narrative FROM THIRD WORLD TO FIRST: THE SINGAPORE STORY: “We have left behind our Third World problems of poverty.” Who would not be boastful in Lee’s shoes? From when he first assumed office as prime minister in 1959 to when he quit power, his country’s GDP rose from a paltry $400 dollars to $12, 200 in 1990, and has been on a steady rise since then.

There is also the story of Brazil’s labour lead­er-turned-politician Luiz Inacio da Silva, popularly known as Lula. Lula shot Brazil from ground zero to a pedestal of respectability where it is no longer looked down on by other nations. Brazil may not be in the First World or class of super advanced countries, but it is certainly not in the class of poverty-stricken Third World countries. Brazil’s technology, agricul­ture and youth empowerment makes it a nation on the upward rise.

Lula quit the stage in 2011 after serving a con­stitutional two terms, and leaving his imprints in the hearts of his people. He said he was fired to offer his best because he needed to prove that labour leaders could also make good administrators. “If I failed, it would be the workers’ class which would be failing; it would be the country’s poor who would be proving they did not have what it takes to rule,” he said, while reminiscing on his stewardship.

In the two instances above, what happened to the countries was its leadership edge. Focused and cre­ative leadership; leadership that made service to the people the fulcrum of its policies and actions. Lead­ership made all the difference. Leadership turned poverty to prosperity; hopelessness to hope; hope to reality.

Without the right leadership, Singapore and Brazil would not be where they are today; Ghana and South Africa would not be challenging us to the leadership position of Africa. The United States of America, the United Kingdom and other parts of Europe would not be the attractive destination point for our army of youths in search of the better life.

In Nigeria, we should never get tired of talking about leadership. Leadership is the reason we are where we are as a nation, where nothing works, where basic amenities of life remain a pipedream, where youth and graduate unemployment has assumed an embarrassing dimension, where infrastructure decay stares us in the face. A nation helplessly and hope­lessly in the vise-grip of criminals and other outlaws. With the right leadership or rather, with the right people in leadership positions, we could be nearer to realising our full potentials, as a truly great nation.

Indeed, we were once on that path to greatness when we had Chief Obafemi Awolowo at the helm of affairs in the West; Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe in the East and Sir Ahmadu Bello in the North. These men dreamt great dreams for their regions, and we saw the results. We saw the economic boom. We witnessed the renaissance in the West where free education was an article of faith. We saw how Bello educated a generation of northern elite. Now sadly, we see the decline in the bomb-crazy youths and almajiri. We see uneducated graduates with degrees that only an­nounce their illiteracy in all parts of the country, in­cluding Awo’s beloved Western region. From a gen­eration of brilliant, job-discriminating Nigerians, we have plummeted to a generation of unemployed and unemployable Nigerians.

The above thesis on Nigeria’s leadership ques­tion throws up the fact that we also once had a Mur­tala Ramat Mohammed, the six-month head of state, slain in a failed coup by obviously misguided ele­ments in the Nigerian Army. February 13 marked 40 years of his brutal killing. And as usual, seminars and remembrance events were held in many parts of the country, including the nation’s capital city of Abuja. Long and short speeches were made extolling the vir­tues of Murtala. He was called a focused, resolute, principled and visionary leader; others described him as a patriot and nationalist, who dreamt lofty dreams for his nation and was on the path to actualising them before he was cut down by angels of darkness. True, very true. But many of those who mouthed those flowery words about Murtala, also nicknamed The Hurricane, were obviously being hypocritical and playing to the gallery. Some only wanted to be politi­cally correct by aligning with the progressive creden­tials of the late General.

How many of those who stood on the dais extolling Mohammed’s virtue are truly patriotic? How many have the integrity and vision of the ex-head of state? How many of them would have the courage to will­ingly surrender personal property to the state based on mere allegations, even when the court was yet to decide, as Murtala did when an activist, Ohonbamu accused him of wrong doing?

How many of our today’s leaders would put the in­terest of our nation above personal and selfish consid­erations? When you think of the current Halliburton and Siemens scandals, involving top Nigerian lead­ers, you shudder at how debased leadership has sunk since and after Murtala’s time.

He was hurricane at home and abroad. He called the bluff of the United States, bellowing: “Africa has come of age, and no longer under the orbit of any country or super power.” That was when the super power countries tried to intimidate Nigeria against supporting the anti-apartheid struggle. Without Mur­tala’s visionary leadership, countries like Angola, Zimbabwe, South Africa, would still be under the bondage of colonial shackles.

He had zero-tolerance for corruption and whipped corrupt civil servants into line. Even though some ac­cuse him of destroying the civil service with his 1975 purge, no one can deny that the place needed urgent detoxification. The rot hasn’t stopped even now.

More than anything else, Murtala proved that it is not how long a leader stays in power, but how well he discharges his duties that matters. In six, quick months, he dazed us with the magic of purposeful leadership; he woke us up from our inertia and deep slumber. He taught us how to believe in ourselves as a nation. That remains his enduring legacy.

Buhari was right when he said Murtala was in a hurry to rouse the sleeping giant to its full majesty and glory. He gave a good account of himself in quite a remarkable short duration.

That’s why if I were President Buhari, I wouldn’t be bothered over a one-term or no second term tenure in the onerous task of cleaning the Augean stable. It is how well a job is done that ultimately matters, as Murtala’s eventful six months prove. But in so doing, he must not fail to connect with the people, explaining all the way, all the time to them the reason he’s taking some of the painful decisions and actions so far. He must seek to aggressively tackle the widespread pov­erty in the land today and arrest the frustrations, even as he cracks down on the plunderers and vampires of the public treasury. He can. He only needs to do it.



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