When Muhammadu Buhari assumed office as Nigeria’s president on May 29, he took the reins of a country in distress.
Insecurity poses a towering challenge, the economy is in dire straits, and corruption and impunity are rife.
Buhari,
who won the election on the promise of change, must now urgently make
good on that promise, starting by rallying Nigerians around what they
have lost: a common vision for the future.
The killings
by the radical Islamist Boko Haram may have ebbed following recent
offensives by forces from Nigeria and its neighbours, but the insurgency
is not yet ended. The country is also plagued by diverse
lower-intensity conflicts and unacceptable levels of criminal violence.
The
economy has slumped over the past year, following an over 50 per cent
plunge in the price of crude oil, whose export accounts for over 70 per
cent of the government’s revenue.
Economic growth
slowed to 4.6 per cent in the first quarter of this year, down from 6.2
per cent in the first quarter of 2014. In recent months, the federal
government has had to borrow just to pay workers. Eighteen of the 36
state governments currently owe employees back pay, some for up to nine
months.
Infrastructure is in disrepair and public utilities are hopelessly unreliable.
Last
week, electricity generation dropped to an unprecedented low. Acute
scarcity of refined petroleum products has created mile-long queues of
vehicles outside filling stations, grounded numerous flights, and
damaged commercial life.
Unemployment remains
pervasive: officially, 22 million are jobless, but many believe the real
figure is much higher. The country still has 10.5 million out-of-school
children — the world’s highest number — many of whom may be future
candidates for insurgency and organised crime.
Corruption
and economic crimes have brought the country to the verge of
bankruptcy. Crude oil is stolen on an industrial scale. The chief of
Nigeria’s navy, Vice Admiral Usman Jibrin, recently estimated that $2.18
billion worth of petroleum is siphoned annually.
COMMON VISION
Early
statements by Buhari and his transitional team suggest keen awareness
of the gravity of the crises and some urgency toward engaging with them.
Yet
Buhari’s first task must be to persuade all Nigerians that he is
president for the entire country and rally them around a common vision
for the future.
Although the recent elections ended
without the widely feared violent protests, the campaign before it
revealed a country deeply fractured along regional, religious, and
ethnic lines.
The latent contradictions and gaping
discontent, between and even within major interest groups, threaten to
frustrate even the most well-meaning plans for progress.
Buhari,
who is from the northern Katsina state, needs to constitute a
competent, but also inclusive, government with credible representation
from all major regional, ethnic, and religious blocs. More importantly,
the new government must devote great effort to policies and programmes
that will address major grievances, reconcile differences, build social
cohesion, and provide better security.
It also needs to
engage positively with states where the outgoing People’s Democratic
Party won, particularly in the Niger Delta, where long-standing economic
and environmental grievances have been aggravated by the ousting of the
first-ever president from the region, Goodluck Jonathan, after only one
term.
The administration will need all the support and
assistance it can get from international partners. Such assistance
should include military training and equipment, intelligence sharing,
humanitarian support in the northeast, bridging loans, technical
assistance, and bilateral cooperation in tracking corruption proceeds.
Investment
toward security and stability could greatly benefit not only Nigeria,
but indeed the entire Africa region. Support in deepening democracy in
Nigeria could also have positive spillover effects on democracy across
Africa.
If Buhari succeeds in delivering on his promise
of change, he will have achieved a historic reversal of Nigeria’s long
slide towards degradation. If he fails, the country will slide deeper
into ruin. The stakes could not be higher.
Mr Obasi is a senior analyst, Nigeria, for International Crisis Group. @NnamdiObasi
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