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A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST - Politics (3) - Nairaland

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Mr President, The "Honeymoon" Is Over - By Harry Slim Omoakhia / 221 People Killed Since Buhari Became President - The Cable / A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President- The Economist (2) (3) (4)

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Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Nobody: 9:30pm On Feb 05, 2015
Very balanced piece... The whole world is tired of Jonathan.

4 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by tomiobj(m): 9:31pm On Feb 05, 2015
Change the topic it's wrong
It should say confused. President not failed
tbaba1234:
The least awful
A former dictator is a better choice than a failed president


SOMETIMES there are no good options. Nigeria goes to the polls on February 14th to elect the next president, who will face problems so large—from rampant corruption to a jihadist insurgency—that they could break the country apart, with dire consequences for Nigerians and the world.

And yet, as Africa’s biggest economy stages its most important election since the restoration of civilian rule in 1999, and perhaps since the civil war four decades ago, Nigerians must pick between the incumbent, Goodluck Jonathan, who has proved an utter failure, and the opposition leader, Muhammadu Buhari, a former military dictator with blood on his hands (see article). The candidates stand as symbols of a broken political system that makes all Nigeria’s problems even more intractable.

Start with Mr Jonathan, whose People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has run the country since 1999 and who stumbled into the presidency on the death of his predecessor in 2010. The PDP’s reign has been a sorry one. Mr Jonathan has shown little willingness to tackle endemic corruption. When the governor of the central bank reported that $20 billion had been stolen, his reward was to be sacked.

Worse, on Mr Jonathan’s watch much of the north of the country has been in flames. About 18,000 people have died in political violence in recent years, thousands of them in January in several brutal attacks by Boko Haram, a jihadist group that claims to have established its “caliphate” in territory as large as Belgium. Another 1.5m people have fled their homes. The insurgency is far from Mr Jonathan’s southern political heartland and afflicts people more likely to vote for the opposition. He has shown little enthusiasm for tackling it, and even less competence. Quick to offer condolences to France after the attack on Charlie Hedbo, Mr Jonathan waited almost two weeks before speaking up about a Boko Haram attack that killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of his compatriots.

The single bright spot of his rule has been Nigeria’s economy, one of the world’s fastest-growing. Yet that is largely despite the government rather than because of it, and falling oil prices will temper the boom. The prosperity has not been broadly shared: under Mr Jonathan poverty has increased. Nigerians typically die eight years younger than their poorer neighbours in nearby Ghana.

Goodbye Jonathan
Voters have ample cause to send Mr Jonathan packing. In a country where power has often changed through the barrel of a gun, the opposition All Progressives Congress has a real chance of winning through the ballot box. Yet its candidate, Mr Buhari, is an ex-general who, three decades ago, came to power in a coup. His rule was nasty, brutish and mercifully short. Declaring a “war against indiscipline”, he ordered whip-wielding soldiers to ensure that Nigerians formed orderly queues. His economics, known as Buharism, was destructive. Instead of letting the currency depreciate in the face of a trade deficit, he tried to fix prices and ban “unnecessary” imports. He expelled 700,000 migrants in the delusion that this would create jobs for Nigerians. He banned political meetings and free speech. He detained thousands, used secret tribunals and executed people for crimes that were not capital offences.

Should a former dictator with such a record be offered another chance? Surprisingly, many Nigerians think he should. One reason is that, in a country where ministers routinely wear wristwatches worth many times their annual salary, Mr Buhari is a sandal-wearing ascetic with a record of fighting corruption. Few nowadays question his commitment to democracy or expect him to turn autocratic: he has repeatedly stood for election and accepted the outcome when he lost. He would probably do a better job of running the country, and in particular of tackling Boko Haram. As a northerner and Muslim, he will have greater legitimacy among villagers whose help he will need to isolate the insurgents. As a military man, he is more likely to win the respect of a demoralised army.

We are relieved not to have a vote in this election. But were we offered one we would—with a heavy heart—choose Mr Buhari. Mr Jonathan risks presiding over Nigeria’s bloody fragmentation. If Mr Buhari can save Nigeria, history might even be kind to him.

http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21642168-former-dictator-better-choice-failed-president-least-awful

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by agabusta: 9:31pm On Feb 05, 2015
genearts:


I agree with you totally, they said "he refused to devalue the naira in the face of trade deficit" because it was IMF recommended and GMB refused, so in their thinking dat was a destructive economic policy

Don't mind them. Imagine, so they think we cannot come up with our own indigenous strategy. Whatever falls short of IMF's recommendations is a no no for them. Silly people. They should go and tell China, Brazil, India that crap.

1 Like

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by uyplus(m): 9:32pm On Feb 05, 2015
GEJ is really that bad to allow Abba Moro still be a serving minister after defrauding jobless youths. He is really that bad to increase his feeding budget from N1bn in 2014 to N4bn in 2015. He is that bad to stay mute when hus wife was indicted in a $13m money laundering case with EFCC. He is really that bad to allow Dieziani use N10bn on private travels. He is really that bad to have spent $30bn on revamping power yet no giant achievements has been made. He is really that bad to have increased our external debts from $26bn to $70bn. He is really that bad to have spent N968bn as security budget yet nothing has been achieved against the fight for insurgency, and the corruption in the military has been left so unabated, that we hear soldiers in the frontline defecting and running due to no arms; the government calls it mutiny. never in our history have we had such a high death toll for commissioned military officers except in GEJ administration.He is really that bad to have stayed mute on the missing $20bn exposition by the whistle blower, Sanusi Lamido. He is really that bad to be budgeting N2bn to build VP residence while ordinary Nigerians are homeless. He is really that to be spending N10bn on 11 presidential jets, when he should be more prudent to have max of 2. He is really that bad to have allowed $15m to be swept under the carpet in the illegal arm deal at South Africa, where the names of the Nigerians involved are still shrouded in secrecy but the name of the Israeli was exposed. He is really that to have attended the Organization of Islamic Countries meeting when no president in Nigeria has ever attended such. He is really that bad to have stayed mute on the scam $470m cctv contract deal in FCT, yet no surveillance camera is working. He is really that bad to have said stealing is not corruption. He is really that bad to have said "how much did Jim Nwobodo stole, money that can't buy a Peugeot" (why would a sitting president commonise stealing of public funds, even if it's N1, it shouldn't be stolen because it's should be a call to service and not an avenue to redefine comfort). He is really that bad to have allowed to pension scam thief go with a little punishment. He is really that bad to have pardoned ex-convicts like Bode george, and Alameyghsia. He is really that bad to have not even find a major road like the east/west road which connconnects the south south region. He is really that bad to allow an overinflated budget of N117bn for the 1.5km 2nd Niger bridge yet Lagos state government built the 1.3km Lekki-Ikoyi bridge for N29bn. GEJ is really that bad to allow Tompolo own a warship, and Asari and Boyloaf issue war threat, yet they haven't been arrested. He is failure to have used his cohorts to aattempt sweeping the issue of the alleged missing N30tn under the carpet.

Other long forgotten issues are the N150m renovation of the VP lodge, N5bn rehabilitation for commercial sex workers, N7bn to build 2 city gates in FCT, N4bn to build first ladies mission house, and the presidency bought 200exotic cars for that event, where are they cars?

Poverty level in Nigeria has risen from 54% to 71%, youth unemployment from 9% to 50%, recurrent expenditure from 62% to 86%, national debt from $26bn to $70bn, whilst GDP growth has dropped from 11% to 6%, and excess crude account has dropped from $20bn to $2bn, petrol has risen from 65 to 87 temporarily (97), $1 has risen from N158 to N210.Nigerians want change. We demand accountability. We want a government that is ready to fight for the masses.

To hell with GEJ. If you fail to see that he is a failure, I will open your eyes to the obvious. He is a failure, even with 6years of oil boom he failed, now he wants to deceive us that he can perform in 4years in oil doom.

14 Likes 3 Shares

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by cirmuell(m): 9:33pm On Feb 05, 2015
PassingShot:


The GEJites will say The Economist is an arm of APC.
grin C'mon bro, what do you expect from Clueless followers.

3 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by anonimi: 9:34pm On Feb 05, 2015
atlwireles:
The economist correspondent in Nigeria, if they have one, will have a front seat come May 2015 during Jonathan's second inauguration.

If all they have, is the invisible $20B, and boko haram. Then Jonathan has done very well.

Abi oh compared to the daft old pensioner whom they acknowledged his economic policy were dumb =>

Instead of letting the currency depreciate in the face of a trade deficit, he tried to fix prices and ban “unnecessary” imports. He expelled 700,000 migrants in the delusion that this would create jobs for Nigerians. He banned political meetings and free speech. He detained thousands, used secret tribunals and executed people for crimes that were not capital offences.

http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21642168-former-dictator-better-choice-failed-president-least-awful

The pretender is indeed DELUDED then


www.nairaland.com/attachments/2094393_image_jpeg9f360c5ab7736510df54c882e9dbf188


www.nairaland.com/attachments/2095210_worst_jpeg588f192a23aa02a7b350a8bbe5d18306


as he remains now


Free meals for pupils, allowance for unemployed youths and N5,000 for poor families – Buhari makes lofty promises to Nigerians


All Progressives Congress, APC, presidential candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari (retd), has promised to provide allowances to discharged but unemployed Youth Corps members for Twelve (12) months while in the skills and entrepreneurial development programmes, if elected in 2015. There is also the pledge to provide One Meal a day for all Primary school pupils.

Buhari/Osibanjo administration also vow to create a Social Welfare Program of at least Five Thousand Naira (N5000) that will cater for the 25 million poorest and most vulnerable citizens upon the demonstration of children’s enrolment in school and evidence of immunisation to help promote family stability.

More from: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2015/01/buhari-promises-allowances-unemployed-corps-members-free-meal-pupils/



The perpetually unelectable old soldier would rather dash out N1.5 trillion i.e. 1/3rd of our 2014 budget rather than continue to revive & expand our railways, roads, electricity, education etc with appropriate economic policies to encourage private investors to create JOBS such that our people can earn a good living in DIGNITY instead of increasing the number of dependent almajiris and area boys shocked




5 Likes 2 Shares

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by todayboy: 9:34pm On Feb 05, 2015
they should have told obama when he was going for his second term

1 Like

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by usibengate(m): 9:36pm On Feb 05, 2015
Balanced
Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Lyoncrescent: 9:37pm On Feb 05, 2015
Remember the Charlie Hebdo attack and how the French president responded in the following days ? GEJ went to Kano to dance to welcome new pdp members a day after the Nyanya bombing. It took pdp government over 2 weeks to acknowledge the chibok girls were kidnapped. How people can vote for GEJ is beyond me

8 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Sagamite(m): 9:38pm On Feb 05, 2015
tbaba1234:
The least awful
A former dictator is a better choice than a failed president


SOMETIMES there are no good options. Nigeria goes to the polls on February 14th to elect the next president, who will face problems so large—from rampant corruption to a jihadist insurgency—that they could break the country apart, with dire consequences for Nigerians and the world.

And yet, as Africa’s biggest economy stages its most important election since the restoration of civilian rule in 1999, and perhaps since the civil war four decades ago, Nigerians must pick between the incumbent, Goodluck Jonathan, who has proved an utter failure, and the opposition leader, Muhammadu Buhari, a former military dictator with blood on his hands (see article). The candidates stand as symbols of a broken political system that makes all Nigeria’s problems even more intractable.

Start with Mr Jonathan, whose People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has run the country since 1999 and who stumbled into the presidency on the death of his predecessor in 2010. The PDP’s reign has been a sorry one. Mr Jonathan has shown little willingness to tackle endemic corruption. When the governor of the central bank reported that $20 billion had been stolen, his reward was to be sacked.

Worse, on Mr Jonathan’s watch much of the north of the country has been in flames. About 18,000 people have died in political violence in recent years, thousands of them in January in several brutal attacks by Boko Haram, a jihadist group that claims to have established its “caliphate” in territory as large as Belgium. Another 1.5m people have fled their homes. The insurgency is far from Mr Jonathan’s southern political heartland and afflicts people more likely to vote for the opposition. He has shown little enthusiasm for tackling it, and even less competence. Quick to offer condolences to France after the attack on Charlie Hedbo, Mr Jonathan waited almost two weeks before speaking up about a Boko Haram attack that killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of his compatriots.

The single bright spot of his rule has been Nigeria’s economy, one of the world’s fastest-growing. Yet that is largely despite the government rather than because of it, and falling oil prices will temper the boom. The prosperity has not been broadly shared: under Mr Jonathan poverty has increased. Nigerians typically die eight years younger than their poorer neighbours in nearby Ghana.

Goodbye Jonathan
Voters have ample cause to send Mr Jonathan packing. In a country where power has often changed through the barrel of a gun, the opposition All Progressives Congress has a real chance of winning through the ballot box. Yet its candidate, Mr Buhari, is an ex-general who, three decades ago, came to power in a coup. His rule was nasty, brutish and mercifully short. Declaring a “war against indiscipline”, he ordered whip-wielding soldiers to ensure that Nigerians formed orderly queues. His economics, known as Buharism, was destructive. Instead of letting the currency depreciate in the face of a trade deficit, he tried to fix prices and ban “unnecessary” imports. He expelled 700,000 migrants in the delusion that this would create jobs for Nigerians. He banned political meetings and free speech. He detained thousands, used secret tribunals and executed people for crimes that were not capital offences.

Should a former dictator with such a record be offered another chance? Surprisingly, many Nigerians think he should. One reason is that, in a country where ministers routinely wear wristwatches worth many times their annual salary, Mr Buhari is a sandal-wearing ascetic with a record of fighting corruption. Few nowadays question his commitment to democracy or expect him to turn autocratic: he has repeatedly stood for election and accepted the outcome when he lost. He would probably do a better job of running the country, and in particular of tackling Boko Haram. As a northerner and Muslim, he will have greater legitimacy among villagers whose help he will need to isolate the insurgents. As a military man, he is more likely to win the respect of a demoralised army.

We are relieved not to have a vote in this election. But were we offered one we would—with a heavy heart—choose Mr Buhari. Mr Jonathan risks presiding over Nigeria’s bloody fragmentation. If Mr Buhari can save Nigeria, history might even be kind to him.

http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21642168-former-dictator-better-choice-failed-president-least-awful


I would rather choose a former dictator who has good intentions and hates corruption than a brainless, clueless, weak, dumb, incompetent reetard who is subservient to his illiterate shepopotamus wife and who rewards and protects corruption.

Corruption is the bane of Nigeria and any leader trying to fight it, instead of encourage it, is the better option.

Secondly, the former's weakness (dictatorship) cannot be repeated because you need a certain structure to be a dictator. A structure that does not exist in Nigeria anymore.

The latter's weakness is only going to be repeated because you need a brain to change it. The brain would never exist in his 50s for this cretin who belongs in a zoo.

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Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by kazmanbanjoko(m): 9:38pm On Feb 05, 2015
Kosoun tadie to le fi eye asa se. Kosi ikan ti jonathan fe fi buhari se.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Toongexa(m): 9:39pm On Feb 05, 2015
ChinemeOkpan:


This is a major blow and an indictment on Jonathan and his government.

If a reputable, internationally recognized outfit like the Economist can decide to endorse Buhari over Jonathan, then GEJ is in trouble

Sai Buhari
From what I read, he didn't endorse anyone. Read and understand b4 u comment. By the way #GMB until GEj can make $1=50naira.

1 Like

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Nobody: 9:40pm On Feb 05, 2015
Worse, on Mr Jonathan’s watch much of the north of the country has been in flames. About 18,000 people have died in political violence in recent years, thousands of them in January in several brutal attacks by Boko Haram, a jihadist group that claims to have established its “caliphate” in territory as large as Belgium. Another 1.5m people have fled their homes. The insurgency is far from Mr Jonathan’s southern political heartland and afflicts people more likely to vote for the opposition. He has shown little enthusiasm for tackling it, and even less competence. Quick to offer condolences to France after the attack on Charlie Hedbo, Mr Jonathan waited almost two weeks before speaking up about a Boko Haram attack that killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of his compatriots.
Jonathan's incompetence has gone global

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by coogar: 9:42pm On Feb 05, 2015
pld4reel:


Oh my Days shocked . you mean a magazine with an average weekly circulation of 1.5 million ??

that just shows the intelligence level of the people supporting PDP. grin

2 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by arsetalks(m): 9:43pm On Feb 05, 2015
Collynzo9:
Let them stop deceiving themselves, Buhari wasn't just a dictator, he was also a failed head of state.
What problem can Buhari beat his chest and say he solved in his tenure?
Their criticism of Mr. President is heavily centered around boko haram, how is Buhari (who insisted that Boko haram members should be pampered like ND militants and that killing them is anti-north) supposed to be the solution?
I am 100% sure you are less than 30 years of age. How you can judge someone who ruled before you were born I do not know.

3 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Sagamite(m): 9:43pm On Feb 05, 2015
barcanista:
Jonathan's incompetence has gone global

Everywhere in the sane, developed world (where this cretin and his wife like to visit), he is regarded as incompetent and a failure but you see some fuuktards on NL screaming "GEJ till 5198".

Democracy is madness. Many people that are allowed to vote should be shot in the head instead.

www.nairaland.com/attachments/2094374_worldsverdictongej2_jpeg8a5dc86f3de8e976cc7521a58708901f

4 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by DTaj: 9:43pm On Feb 05, 2015
PassingShot:
The whole world is tired of Mr. Clueless' Cluelessness.

Buhari's regime wasn't perfect but was far more effective. Whatever mistakes he made was out of being over ambitious to rescue Nigeria and not for any personal gains.

As a democratic president, he cannot be as brutish as a military head of state with all the checks and balances in place. And once corruption is cut to the barest level we will soon begin to see progress in every aspect of our economy.

Good thinking...I tell my fellow compatriots that CORRUPTION is Nigeria's BIGGEST PROBLEM! There are too many scandals and avenues to siphon money from the public treasury- NNPC scam, pension scam, 400,000 barrel-a-day oil theft, Diezani's jet hire, hyper-inflated contracts, contracts undone for which billions were released, and several other scandals! If those funds were ploughed back to our economy, we would fare better...

The rotten head (Jonathan) could not have saved the body (the economy, Nigeria, and Nigerians). Hopefully, a fresh, good head (Buhari) would make the body (the economy, Nigeria, and Nigerians) whole again!

Time for Nigeria's renewal under a Buhari Presidency!!!

6 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Nobody: 9:45pm On Feb 05, 2015
What an AWESOME/FLAWLESS piece!!! D clueless animal doctor is on his way to otuoke ZOO!
Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by ChinemeOkpan: 9:45pm On Feb 05, 2015
Toongexa:
From what I read, he didn't endorse anyone. Read and understand b4 u comment. By the way #GMB until GEj can make $1=50naira.

Who is he?

This is what the Economist Magazine said.

We are relieved not to have a vote in this election. But were we offered one we would—with a heavy heart—choose Mr Buhari. Mr Jonathan risks presiding over Nigeria’s bloody fragmentation. If Mr Buhari can save Nigeria, history might even be kind to him

Sai GMB

4 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by iiichidodo: 9:47pm On Feb 05, 2015
pld4reel:


Oh my Days shocked . you mean a magazine with an average weekly circulation of 1.5 million ??
Where did you pull out those figures from?? Your wet weed induced coma?!
Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by ChinemeOkpan: 9:48pm On Feb 05, 2015
Sagamite:


Everywhere in the sane, developed world (where this cretin and his wife like to visit), he is regarded as incompetent and a failure but you see some fuuktards on NL screaming "GEJ till 5198".

Democracy is madness. Many people that are allowed to vote should be shot in the head instead.

A bit extremist but makes sense.

Nigerians are waking up now, they are embracing change. It is good to see Nigerians putting pressure on the incumbent government for a change.
Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Lyoncrescent: 9:50pm On Feb 05, 2015
iiichidodo:
Where did you pull out those figures from?? Your wet weed induced coma?!
http://www.economistgroupmedia.com/planning-tools/circulation

2 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by iiichidodo: 9:51pm On Feb 05, 2015
arsetalks:
I am 100% sure you are less than 30 years of age. How you can judge someone who ruled before you were born I do not know.
Then it is better for south africans born after the apartheid to vote for its return? Or is also fitting for Germans of this generation to vote for the return of Nazism in Government? I don't understand you.
Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by arsetalks(m): 9:51pm On Feb 05, 2015
mrborntodoit:
Enemies of Nigeria are at it again!

Only Buhari can give them access to our natural resources .

Gej and the Chinese connection has made the west sleepless especially the US
what an irony? People like you judge him on his past but still think he will be a sissy to the western world.

If he wasn't a sissy to them in the past, why will he be now?

3 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Orikinla(m): 9:53pm On Feb 05, 2015
tbaba1234:
The least awful
A former dictator is a better choice than a failed president


SOMETIMES there are no good options. Nigeria goes to the polls on February 14th to elect the next president, who will face problems so large—from rampant corruption to a jihadist insurgency—that they could break the country apart, with dire consequences for Nigerians and the world.

And yet, as Africa’s biggest economy stages its most important election since the restoration of civilian rule in 1999, and perhaps since the civil war four decades ago, Nigerians must pick between the incumbent, Goodluck Jonathan, who has proved an utter failure, and the opposition leader, Muhammadu Buhari, a former military dictator with blood on his hands (see article). The candidates stand as symbols of a broken political system that makes all Nigeria’s problems even more intractable.

Start with Mr Jonathan, whose People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has run the country since 1999 and who stumbled into the presidency on the death of his predecessor in 2010. The PDP’s reign has been a sorry one. Mr Jonathan has shown little willingness to tackle endemic corruption. When the governor of the central bank reported that $20 billion had been stolen, his reward was to be sacked.

Worse, on Mr Jonathan’s watch much of the north of the country has been in flames. About 18,000 people have died in political violence in recent years, thousands of them in January in several brutal attacks by Boko Haram, a jihadist group that claims to have established its “caliphate” in territory as large as Belgium. Another 1.5m people have fled their homes. The insurgency is far from Mr Jonathan’s southern political heartland and afflicts people more likely to vote for the opposition. He has shown little enthusiasm for tackling it, and even less competence. Quick to offer condolences to France after the attack on Charlie Hedbo, Mr Jonathan waited almost two weeks before speaking up about a Boko Haram attack that killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of his compatriots.

The single bright spot of his rule has been Nigeria’s economy, one of the world’s fastest-growing. Yet that is largely despite the government rather than because of it, and falling oil prices will temper the boom. The prosperity has not been broadly shared: under Mr Jonathan poverty has increased. Nigerians typically die eight years younger than their poorer neighbours in nearby Ghana.

Goodbye Jonathan
Voters have ample cause to send Mr Jonathan packing. In a country where power has often changed through the barrel of a gun, the opposition All Progressives Congress has a real chance of winning through the ballot box. Yet its candidate, Mr Buhari, is an ex-general who, three decades ago, came to power in a coup. His rule was nasty, brutish and mercifully short. Declaring a “war against indiscipline”, he ordered whip-wielding soldiers to ensure that Nigerians formed orderly queues. His economics, known as Buharism, was destructive. Instead of letting the currency depreciate in the face of a trade deficit, he tried to fix prices and ban “unnecessary” imports. He expelled 700,000 migrants in the delusion that this would create jobs for Nigerians. He banned political meetings and free speech. He detained thousands, used secret tribunals and executed people for crimes that were not capital offences.

Should a former dictator with such a record be offered another chance? Surprisingly, many Nigerians think he should. One reason is that, in a country where ministers routinely wear wristwatches worth many times their annual salary, Mr Buhari is a sandal-wearing ascetic with a record of fighting corruption. Few nowadays question his commitment to democracy or expect him to turn autocratic: he has repeatedly stood for election and accepted the outcome when he lost. He would probably do a better job of running the country, and in particular of tackling Boko Haram. As a northerner and Muslim, he will have greater legitimacy among villagers whose help he will need to isolate the insurgents. As a military man, he is more likely to win the respect of a demoralised army.

We are relieved not to have a vote in this election. But were we offered one we would—with a heavy heart—choose Mr Buhari. Mr Jonathan risks presiding over Nigeria’s bloody fragmentation. If Mr Buhari can save Nigeria, history might even be kind to him.

http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21642168-former-dictator-better-choice-failed-president-least-awful

5 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by MadCow1: 9:53pm On Feb 05, 2015
tbaba1234:
The least awful
A former dictator is a better choice than a failed president


SOMETIMES there are no good options. Nigeria goes to the polls on February 14th to elect the next president, who will face problems so large—from rampant corruption to a jihadist insurgency—that they could break the country apart, with dire consequences for Nigerians and the world.

And yet, as Africa’s biggest economy stages its most important election since the restoration of civilian rule in 1999, and perhaps since the civil war four decades ago, Nigerians must pick between the incumbent, Goodluck Jonathan, who has proved an utter failure, and the opposition leader, Muhammadu Buhari, a former military dictator with blood on his hands (see article). The candidates stand as symbols of a broken political system that makes all Nigeria’s problems even more intractable.

Start with Mr Jonathan, whose People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has run the country since 1999 and who stumbled into the presidency on the death of his predecessor in 2010. The PDP’s reign has been a sorry one. Mr Jonathan has shown little willingness to tackle endemic corruption. When the governor of the central bank reported that $20 billion had been stolen, his reward was to be sacked.

Worse, on Mr Jonathan’s watch much of the north of the country has been in flames. About 18,000 people have died in political violence in recent years, thousands of them in January in several brutal attacks by Boko Haram, a jihadist group that claims to have established its “caliphate” in territory as large as Belgium. Another 1.5m people have fled their homes. The insurgency is far from Mr Jonathan’s southern political heartland and afflicts people more likely to vote for the opposition. He has shown little enthusiasm for tackling it, and even less competence. Quick to offer condolences to France after the attack on Charlie Hedbo, Mr Jonathan waited almost two weeks before speaking up about a Boko Haram attack that killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of his compatriots.

The single bright spot of his rule has been Nigeria’s economy, one of the world’s fastest-growing. Yet that is largely despite the government rather than because of it, and falling oil prices will temper the boom. The prosperity has not been broadly shared: under Mr Jonathan poverty has increased. Nigerians typically die eight years younger than their poorer neighbours in nearby Ghana.

Goodbye Jonathan
Voters have ample cause to send Mr Jonathan packing. In a country where power has often changed through the barrel of a gun, the opposition All Progressives Congress has a real chance of winning through the ballot box. Yet its candidate, Mr Buhari, is an ex-general who, three decades ago, came to power in a coup. His rule was nasty, brutish and mercifully short. Declaring a “war against indiscipline”, he ordered whip-wielding soldiers to ensure that Nigerians formed orderly queues. His economics, known as Buharism, was destructive. Instead of letting the currency depreciate in the face of a trade deficit, he tried to fix prices and ban “unnecessary” imports. He expelled 700,000 migrants in the delusion that this would create jobs for Nigerians. He banned political meetings and free speech. He detained thousands, used secret tribunals and executed people for crimes that were not capital offences.

Should a former dictator with such a record be offered another chance? Surprisingly, many Nigerians think he should. One reason is that, in a country where ministers routinely wear wristwatches worth many times their annual salary, Mr Buhari is a sandal-wearing ascetic with a record of fighting corruption. Few nowadays question his commitment to democracy or expect him to turn autocratic: he has repeatedly stood for election and accepted the outcome when he lost. He would probably do a better job of running the country, and in particular of tackling Boko Haram. As a northerner and Muslim, he will have greater legitimacy among villagers whose help he will need to isolate the insurgents. As a military man, he is more likely to win the respect of a demoralised army.

We are relieved not to have a vote in this election. But were we offered one we would—with a heavy heart—choose Mr Buhari. Mr Jonathan risks presiding over Nigeria’s bloody fragmentation. If Mr Buhari can save Nigeria, history might even be kind to him.

http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21642168-former-dictator-better-choice-failed-president-least-awful




So you mean Ghanaians are now living longer than Nogerians because of Jonathan? angry

And I thought it was Shagamu that deported the Ghanaians?





Anyways, Jonathan must Go .. grin

1 Like

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by dokunbam(m): 9:55pm On Feb 05, 2015
I believe he will right his wrong
Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Intrepidone(m): 9:55pm On Feb 05, 2015
tbaba1234:
The least awful
A former dictator is a better choice than a failed president


SOMETIMES there are no good options. Nigeria goes to the polls on February 14th to elect the next president, who will face problems so large—from rampant corruption to a jihadist insurgency—that they could break the country apart, with dire consequences for Nigerians and the world.

And yet, as Africa’s biggest economy stages its most important election since the restoration of civilian rule in 1999, and perhaps since the civil war four decades ago, Nigerians must pick between the incumbent, Goodluck Jonathan, who has proved an utter failure, and the opposition leader, Muhammadu Buhari, a former military dictator with blood on his hands (see article). The candidates stand as symbols of a broken political system that makes all Nigeria’s problems even more intractable.

Start with Mr Jonathan, whose People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has run the country since 1999 and who stumbled into the presidency on the death of his predecessor in 2010. The PDP’s reign has been a sorry one. Mr Jonathan has shown little willingness to tackle endemic corruption. When the governor of the central bank reported that $20 billion had been stolen, his reward was to be sacked.

Worse, on Mr Jonathan’s watch much of the north of the country has been in flames. About 18,000 people have died in political violence in recent years, thousands of them in January in several brutal attacks by Boko Haram, a jihadist group that claims to have established its “caliphate” in territory as large as Belgium. Another 1.5m people have fled their homes. The insurgency is far from Mr Jonathan’s southern political heartland and afflicts people more likely to vote for the opposition. He has shown little enthusiasm for tackling it, and even less competence. Quick to offer condolences to France after the attack on Charlie Hedbo, Mr Jonathan waited almost two weeks before speaking up about a Boko Haram attack that killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of his compatriots.

The single bright spot of his rule has been Nigeria’s economy, one of the world’s fastest-growing. Yet that is largely despite the government rather than because of it, and falling oil prices will temper the boom. The prosperity has not been broadly shared: under Mr Jonathan poverty has increased. Nigerians typically die eight years younger than their poorer neighbours in nearby Ghana.

Goodbye Jonathan
Voters have ample cause to send Mr Jonathan packing. In a country where power has often changed through the barrel of a gun, the opposition All Progressives Congress has a real chance of winning through the ballot box. Yet its candidate, Mr Buhari, is an ex-general who, three decades ago, came to power in a coup. His rule was nasty, brutish and mercifully short. Declaring a “war against indiscipline”, he ordered whip-wielding soldiers to ensure that Nigerians formed orderly queues. His economics, known as Buharism, was destructive. Instead of letting the currency depreciate in the face of a trade deficit, he tried to fix prices and ban “unnecessary” imports. He expelled 700,000 migrants in the delusion that this would create jobs for Nigerians. He banned political meetings and free speech. He detained thousands, used secret tribunals and executed people for crimes that were not capital offences.

Should a former dictator with such a record be offered another chance? Surprisingly, many Nigerians think he should. One reason is that, in a country where ministers routinely wear wristwatches worth many times their annual salary, Mr Buhari is a sandal-wearing ascetic with a record of fighting corruption. Few nowadays question his commitment to democracy or expect him to turn autocratic: he has repeatedly stood for election and accepted the outcome when he lost. He would probably do a better job of running the country, and in particular of tackling Boko Haram. As a northerner and Muslim, he will have greater legitimacy among villagers whose help he will need to isolate the insurgents. As a military man, he is more likely to win the respect of a demoralised army.

We are relieved not to have a vote in this election. But were we offered one we would—with a heavy heart—choose Mr Buhari. Mr Jonathan risks presiding over Nigeria’s bloody fragmentation. If Mr Buhari can save Nigeria, history might even be kind to him.

http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21642168-former-dictator-better-choice-failed-president-least-awful

to be civilised you don't have to be educated. #GMBfeb14
Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Lyoncrescent: 9:55pm On Feb 05, 2015
16 years of pdp and we don't know what's happening with the ajaokuta steel mill and goodluck said the Chinese are going to import the steel required for the second Niger bridge. It's very tragic how some men of God are not standing on the truth and rather spreading propaganda. Pastor bosun Emmanuel rings a bell. We need change . We need buhari

3 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by tbaba1234: 9:55pm On Feb 05, 2015
iiichidodo:
Where did you pull out those figures from?? Your wet weed induced coma?!

The Economist now has paid circulation of 1.6m a week — more than Bloomberg’s Businessweek, which has nearly 1m, although significantly less than Time, which has 5m.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ea4f2f50-8166-11e4-b956-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3QuF55mfA

2 Likes

Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by mmsen: 9:57pm On Feb 05, 2015
They raise some good points (alongside the obvious fallacies) but I would be very wary of anything suggested by the Economist, many of the policies that they push for are the same disastrous World Bank/IMF sponsored ideas that destroy nations but benefit the (Western) nations that back those same institutions.

It is unlikely that the agenda that they (The Economist) push for is one which has the Nigerian people at heart. The economist is not a publication known for taking into consideration human welfare. To see them cite human life expectancy as a measure of success is somewhat ironic knowing how they demonized the author Edward Baptist who dared to criticize the American capitalist elite and their slave owning beginnings http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2014/09/05/when-the-economist-blamed-irish-peasants-for-starving-to-death/.

Learn to identify your enemy - it is neither Buhari nor Jonathan.
Re: A Former Dictator Is A Better Choice Than A Failed President - THE ECONOMIST by Nobody: 9:57pm On Feb 05, 2015
A very very balanced write-up.. Not like our useless sahara or vanguard people dat will be spilling ethnic and religious bigotry running through their DNA

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