Yesterday,
27th August, 2018, many Nigerian news outlets carried a reportage on
an insult allegedly sent in the direction of President Buhari by President
Donald Trump after a meeting between the two leaders in April 2018. The Punch
wrote that “”Financial Times, in the publication titled, ‘Africa looks for
something new out of Donald Trump’, stated, “The first meeting, with Nigeria’s
ailing 75-year-old Muhammadu Buhari in April ended with the US President
telling aides he never wanted to meet someone so lifeless again, according to
three people familiar with the matter.””
Since
the publication made the headlines, as is usual with Nigerians, two opposing
groups, one supporting Mr. Trump and the other against have emerged with each
trying to outshout the other. The alleged Mr. Trump’s insult has provided
fodder to the cannon of the opposition, with some calling for Mr. Buhari’s
outright resignation. They are calling for Mr. Buhari’s head because a foreign
leader insulted his carriage and cogitative style. At the other end of the
divide, Mr. Buhari’s party in power will like everyone to remember the famous
800-metre Sallah walk as a sign of life in Mr. Buhari.
An
interesting question that comes to mind is whether Mr. Buhari already had
foreknowledge through his intelligence services that this claim of lifelessness
was going to be published, so he walked or did he just walk for the fun of it?
Or is it that the opposition seeks to debunk his walk through Trump’s claims of
lifelessness? We will never know.
However, what both opposing political groups and the
different non-partisan voices that have joined in the fray seem to be
forgetting is that the Presidency is a national symbol currently being held by
Mr. Buhari. It is like our flag, our currency, our constitution. It is not to
be derided by anyone, particularly foreigners. And if it happens, as is the
case under question, it is the collective responsibility of the entire
citizenry irrespective of their political affiliations to jointly condemn such
an insult.
Just to cite a few examples of responsible
patriotism: at the height of the spat between Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim Jong Un of
North Korea, Mr. Un called Mr. Trump a ‘mentally deranged U.S. dotard’ who is “is
unfit to hold the prerogative of supreme command of a country, and he is surely
a rogue and a gangster fond of playing with fire, rather than a politician.” We did not read of any American supporting
this view. All Americans irrespective of their political leanings took side
with their president. No American took the side of Kim Jong Un. No one asked
Trump to resign because a foreign leader labelled him as being unfit to rule a
country.
When Mr. Trump called Kim Jong Un “an obvious
madman” in September 2017, we didn’t read anywhere that North or even South
Koreans rolled out drums and sided with him.
After
the G7 summit
in June 2018, Mr. Trump insulted Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
calling him “meek and mild.”….“very dishonest & weak.” We did not read or
hear of any reports that the Canadian opposition demanded the resignation of
Trudeau, just because Trump conflicted with him on views. All Canadians stood
solidly behind their national symbol.
In November 2017,
Donald Trump publicly challenged Theresa May tweeting “….don’t focus on me,
focus on the destructive Radical Islamic Terrorism that is taking place within
the United Kingdom”
British citizens
did not collectively appreciate this.
Mr. Trump’s insult of
President Buhari has no intrinsic political worth to governance in Nigeria and should
not be taken beyond being reported as another example of his unbridled tendency
to demean others. So commonplace is this tendency that New York Times compiled
a list (probably not exhaustive) of the people, places and things that this
American President has insulted on Twitter. See (The 487 People, Places and
Things Donald Trump Has Insulted on Twitter: A Complete List) https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/01/28/upshot/donald-trump-twitter-insults.html
The list has to
be updated to include Mr. Buhari…..
Finally, Nigerian
politicians need their heads examined. Using an unsolicited uncourteous comment
by a foreign leader towards the Nigerian president as a campaign tool is a
reckless abuse of democracy. Patriotism comes first.
1 comment:
Your blog was posted on randomly on a group i follow on Whatsapp. I would like to say that i quite agree with you. As much as i enjoy antagonism towards our president M. Buhari, i cannot accept unbridled comments by another president of no matter what country, towards our president.
Still...it points to our inability to put intelligent candidates forward for the post of our presidency and it is sad indeed.
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