Many Nigerians on Wednesday
overwhelmingly backed the Enugu Catholic priest and Spiritual Director
of the Adoration Ministry, Enugu State, Rev. Fr. Ejike Mbaka, for his
blunt message to President Muhammadu Buhari.
However, some Nigerians mocked the
cleric on social media, saying he should have known that the President
was not the ‘messiah’ the country needed before supporting him during
the 2015 presidential election campaign.
Mbaka had in 2015 prophesied the defeat of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, who he urged Nigerians to reject.
On Tuesday, the respected cleric shocked
many when he said that Nigerians would not vote for Buhari in 2019
unless the President addressed the socio-economic challenges facing the
county.
In the message that is currently
trending, Mbaka said there was too much suffering in the country and
faulted the President for not appointing the right persons.
He said, “There is hunger everywhere.
Landlords are crying; tenants are lamenting, sellers are crying, buyers
are lamenting – there is hunger on the streets. I can’t keep quiet when
things are going wrong.
“I am telling the President to look
around him and know those who are advising him rightly and those who are
telling him that there is no trouble. The President should know that
there is trouble. If things continue like this, in the next election,
nobody will vote for him.”
A former governor of old Kaduna State, Baralabe Musa, on Wednesday said Mbaka’s message stated the obvious.
Musa, who spoke with our correspondent
on the telephone, said the President could only win the 2019 election
through rigging, which he said would plunge the country into crisis.
He said, “If the challenges facing
Nigeria are not addressed, Buhari will lose in 2019 except he rigs the
election. And that will be dangerous for the country.”
Another northern leader, Yerima
Shettima, said the President was fast losing the goodwill that gave him
electoral victory last year. He noted that the Buhari administration had
lost focus, which had led to abject poverty and suffering for
Nigerians.
Shettima, who is the President of the
Arewa Youth Consultative Forum, said the President shunned the counsel
of honest Nigerians at the risk of his goodwill and future electoral
value.
He said, “The level of poverty is
extremely high and it is worsening. People have advised him, but he
refused to heed good counsel. His goodwill has nosedived.
“What we have seen is different from the
expectations of the masses. People sacrificed so much to ensure that he
emerged victorious at the poll. But what we have seen is appalling.
Personally, I have stopped advising him because he does not listen.”
The National President, Ohaneze Youth
Council, Mr. Okechukwu Isiguzoro, told our correspondent that Mbaka
spoke the minds of the people in the eastern part of Nigeria.
“I don’t know what the South-West and
the North think; but Mbaka’s statement is the voice of the Igbo. The
reality is everywhere. There is suffering everywhere; people struggle to
feed. There is hunger in the land because of the President’s poor
handling of the economy,” he added.
A Lagos-based lawyer and human rights
activist, Liborous Oshoma, compared the waning goodwill of Buhari to the
challenge ex-President Jonathan faced, leading to his loss to Buhari in
2015.
Oshoma said, “What Mbaka said is the
reality. People who overwhelmingly cast their votes for Buhari last year
are beginning to have a rethink. People saw him as the messiah
Nigerians had long waited for. However, what we have seen is not what we
expected.
“We should not forget that Jonathan had a
similar support in 2011, but he blew it. Now, Buhari is gradually
blowing away his. If he does not address the current challenges, even
his party, the All Progressives Congress, may pay for his inaction.”
Mbaka’s bold message also provided an opportunity for Buhari’s opponents at the poll to assess his administrative style.
For instance, Remi Sonaiya, who
contested on the platform of the KOWA Party, said a natural democrat
could have managed the challenges confronting the country better.
She said, “There is no doubt that there
are general problems. Part of the issues people have raised about the
President is that he does not react quickly to issues, and that his
military background is affecting him.
“Perhaps, somebody with a different
background could have handled the issues differently and better. The
President has just put together an economic team. One wonders why it
took him over a year to do that.”
On social media, Mbaka’s message got a large number of comments and they kept increasing as of 9pm on Wednesday. On The PUNCH’s website and on other digital platforms of the newspaper, it received hundreds of comments and shares.
Commenting on punchng.com, Bill
Johnson, who joined other readers to ventilate the issue raised by the
cleric, said he was disappointed at the manner the President blamed
others for the challenges facing the country. He said buck-passing was a
major reason the administration had yet to deliver on any of its
campaign promises.
He wrote, “Blaming others is not a
quality of a true leader. A true leader does not blame followers, he
takes the blame, and that compels him to look for solutions.”
A Twittter user, Tunde Orimidupa, wrote,
“What Mbaka said was not an attack, but an obvious truth. He did the
same thing during Jonathan’s administration. He is doing it again.
Nigerians should commend him.”
Writing on Facebook, Ayotunde Ajiboye
said, “Mbaka only spoke the truth; there is a threat ahead because
people are hungry. A hungry man is an angry man. The issue is beyond
voting for him in 2019; I foresee a mass revolt if the government does
not act fast.”
Aldrin Ativie also tweeted, “The truth is that Nigerians know there is trouble in the land.”
Kingsley Alexander, who tweeted on
@KingsleyAlexan9, advised the President to urgently fix the economy,
adding that he was fast losing patience.
According to Daniel Igboanyika, Mbaka’s message aptly captured the mood of the country.
He said over 95 per cent of Nigerians were not happy with the manner the President had handled the economy.
On Facebook, Olufemi Mathew Ojo wrote,
“Mbaka said the same thing during Jonathan’s era and it happened, now he
is saying the same thing to Buhari.”
Akinsanya Waheed also wrote, “If one plastic of garri remains N600 till next year, I will vote Buhari out of power in 2019.”
On Disqus, an online commentary platform, O’seun Ogunseitan, however, disagreed with Mbaka.
According to him, Buhari’s performance is constrained by the level of corruption that characterised the Jonathan administration.
“The administration did nothing in six
years to build a functional refinery although the yearly fuel subsidy it
paid would have built one. Jonathan’s ‘experts’ were only good at
ruining the economy. They left the economy in a terrible condition,” he
wrote.
But one of Mbaka’s critics, Elobyte
Formidable, wrote on Twitter, “Mbaka does not deserve the attention he
gets. When did he realise that Buhari was not good enough for Nigeria?
If he is truly a pastor, he should have known that Buhari would not take
the country out of misery.”
Source: PunchNews
Nigerians back Mbaka, say hunger, poverty unbearable
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