politix
Memo to Buhari: el-Rufai says I’ve no apology,
The Kaduna State Governor, Nasir
El-Rufai, on Friday said that he had no apology for writing a memo
believed to be critical of the present administration to President
Muhammadu Buhari.
El-Rufai said this in an interview with
State House correspondents shortly after he joined Buhari for the
Juma’at prayer at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
The governor had in a 29-page memo dated
September 22, 2016, told Buhari that his administration had not only
failed in meeting the expectations of Nigerians but equally fell short
of delivering on mundane issues of governance.
In the memo titled, “Immediate and
medium-term imperatives for President Muhammadu Buhari,” he also claimed
that the President is surrounded by inexperienced and clueless
officials, who don’t share in the vision of the ruling All Progressives
Congress.
El-Rufai also noted that he was
conscious of the fact that his memo might be misunderstood but willing
to accept the consequences
In the interview with State House correspondents, the governor said his memo to the President was not ill-motivated.
While saying he had no regret for
writing the document, the governor said he would not hesitate to write
another memo to the President if the need arose.
The Kaduna State governor also said he
was disappointed that a private memo he sent to Buhari on the state of
the nation could be leaked to the public.
He said those who published the document revealed the identities of those who leaked it to them.
He said, “I am disappointed that a
private communication to the highest office in the land can be leaked
and it was leaked from the villa. I am told by those that published it,
but this is a fact of life.
“We live in an age where anything you
write or say can be leaked. It is ok, my intentions are clear, I have no
ill motive but I wanted to communicate with the President what many
Nigerians are talking about and what steps can be taken to improve
governance of the country and move the country forward.
“That was my motive and if tomorrow,
like I said, I see anything that the President needs to know, I will
discuss with him and I will articulate and put it into writing and on
the record for him to have a reminder document to work on.
“I have no regrets and I have no apologies.”
The governor said the publication of the
memo had not caused any strain in his relationship with the President,
saying their relationship is like that of a father and son.
He said he had earlier met with Buhari on Thursday night and he was received with warmth.
He said it was normal that in a big
place like the Presidential Villa, there would be those who like him and
those who do not like him.
El-Rufai explained that he had written similar memos to the President in the past and none of them got leaked.
He said the content had nothing to do other than the success of the President and the nation’s progress.
He said Buhari knew he could count on
him to give him his views and sound advice on issues, adding that he
would stand behind the President to the end.
When asked if his memo had changed
anything in the polity, el-Rufai said a lot of improvements had been
recorded between the time he wrote the memo in 2016 and now.
The governor said, “Yes, I believe that
since September last year when I wrote the letter, there has been
significant improvement in the delivery of services at the federal
level. As I said, some of our federal programmes have started in
earnest.
“Social protection for instance, the
N-Power, budget releases have been accelerated. This is an unprecedented
move. The Minister of Finance has released up to about a trillion naira
of capital budget.
“In September last year, little or
nothing had been released and that was part of my concern. Since then,
the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan has been done and published. At
the time I wrote the memo, there was no five-year plan for the country.
“Since then, the government has moved
ahead to change some of the appointees of President Jonathan in
parastatals. This is something that we were worried about. Many of us in
APC felt that we were in office but not in power because the people
that Jonathan appointed were still running most of our key agencies.
“From September till date, even up until
yesterday (Thursday), there have been significant improvements. So
there is improvement and I believe that part of what I recommended to
the President is being implemented, whether because of my memo or not,
it is being implemented, the country is moving forward and I am grateful
to God for it.”
El-Rufai said there was no truth in the
claim that some people stopped him from visiting the Presidential Villa
after the letter was made public.
He said he opted to allow Buhari rest and recover fully because he knew that too many visitors put stress on leaders.
“No one ever stopped me from coming to
the villa and no one can stop me from coming to the villa. As a
governor, I come here, I have blank cheques, no one checks me at the
gate but I believe what the President needs is for those that love him
to keep away from him and allow him to rest.
“The President needs quality time to
rest because it is meeting too many people that strains leadership. I am
a governor and I know that when I meet 10 people in a day, I get really
tired, it is not the paperwork, it is not really the memos approving
them or asking questions that strain a leader, it is the stream of
visitors.
“I do not want to contribute to the
President’s problem by coming here every day. I am in touch with him, I
know everything going on and I do not think I should add to his burden.
Most of the time I come to visit the President I do not come to the
office, I go to see him at home.
“I think and I appeal to all of us that
love the President to please allow him some space so that he will
recover. We need him and the country needs him, it is in our interest
for the stability of the country, we should just let him be.
“It is absolutely necessary. Let’s leave
him to do his work in the privacy of his room or his office without
strings of visitors. Visitors stress leaders.”
El-Rufai said there was nothing unusual
between him and the National Assembly despite his recent exchange of
words with the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara,
who he described as his kid brother.
He said the only thing he did was ask
the leadership of the National Assembly to fulfil the promise that they
made themselves to publish the details of their budget.
He said he made the demand as a citizen
and that all Nigerians are entitled to make the same demand. The
governor added that it is in the National Assembly’s interest to publish
it because there are rumours of bogus amounts of money that they are
getting which he suspects is not true.
“I think that the best way to kill that
rumour is to publish the details of their budget but some people took
exception to that call for transparency and I have no apologies because
as citizens, we have the right to demand for transparency on how
resources are being spent.
“This one hundred billion or so budget
of the National Assembly is money belonging to the people of Nigeria and
every Nigerian has the right to ask and I am exercising that right as a
citizen not even as a governor.
“I have no problem with the Speaker, he
is my kid brother, he respects me and I respect him. I have no problem
with the Senate President, we worked together in the past and I am
confident that we will work together in the future in the interest of
Nigeria.
“Demand for accountability is not a
problem and should not be construed to be undermining or any such thing.
It is only someone who has something to hide that will do things like
that and I don’t believe that the National Assembly has things to hide,”
he said.
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