You Are A Civilian Dictator, Ex-Presidential Candidate Knocks Tinubu

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Former presidential candidate of the African Renaissance Party, Alhaji Yahaya Ndu, has strongly criticized President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s economic policies, describing them as thoughtless and detrimental to Nigeria’s economy.

In an interview with newsmen Ndu expressed concerns that these policies have pushed many Nigerians into extreme poverty.

He also criticised Tinubu’s leadership style, labelling it a “civilian dictatorship.”

Ndu emphasised the need for a mass participatory approach to address the country’s challenges, arguing that democracy should be about active citizen engagement, not just electing leaders.

He pointed out that the combined votes of Tinubu, Peter Obi, Atiku Abubakar, and Rabi’u Kwankwaso didn’t even reach 20 per cent of Nigeria’s population, highlighting the disconnect between the government and the people.

Ndu said, “People said that President Tinubu is just in power a little over a year and that he should be given the opportunity to turn things around, but when they said this thing, I got worried because we are supposed to be practising party democracy and his party has been in power since 2015. The President was the leader of APC. So many of the top functionaries of the party were nominated by him or tutored by him.

“For instance, the current Chief of Staff was then Speaker of the House of Representatives and so on. In any case, when he came on board, he said he was coming to continue from where Buhari stopped. The point I was trying to make is that it is dishonest to say that he just met the trouble, and he is trying to fix it because he has always been part of the team led by Buhari since 2015.”

Ndu explained that party democracy means that you are collectively responsible for the actions of your party, insisting that the President’s henchmen should better stop pulling the wool over the eyes of Nigerians by saying he just came on board because he has always been there.

“In any case, I am not even surprised that he is not able to handle the situation because shortly before the election I stated in a press conference that it is either he does not have the solutions or that he is not patriotic. If he had the solutions all along he would have given the solutions to his party to implement even before coming to be President and if he didn’t have the solutions that meant he didn’t have them, if he had them and he refused to put them on board for his party to implement, that means he was not patriotic. You don’t get the solution simply because you became President.

“In any case, even during the electioneering campaign to become President he consistently refused to answer any question. Remember even when he went to Chatham House, when questions were put to him, he delegated others around him like Nasir el-Rufai to answer the questions for him. During rallies when he was supposed to address people on his programmes he was holding broom and dancing.

“So, I am not surprised that things are getting worse under him, but I am not blaming him as a person, I am blaming all of us for agreeing to be so fooled, not just by him but by the whole polity we are operating. If you put all the votes that Tinubu had in the election, whether rigged or unrigged, together and add that one of Peter Obi, Atiku Abubakar and Rabi’u Kwankwaso, they don’t come up to 20 per cent of the population of the people of Nigeria; and if you said as for those who voted, it is still an extremely negligible percentage.

On fuel subsidy, Ndu stated that the removal of subsidies on Premium Motor Spirit was the worst decision of the Tinubu administration.

He said, “To start with, even if it was supposed to be the best decision, it was removed in the most wrong possible way.

“You remember that he removed the fuel subsidy even before he had a cabinet during his swearing-in that more than anything is the most eloquent, graphic explanation that this was a civilian dictatorship, and if I were in his position, if I think that the best decision is to remove the fuel subsidy the most common thing or the basics thing my administration would have done is to, first of all, encourage all those young boys and girls who are operating what our country prefers to call illegal refineries who we send our Air Force, soldiers and Navy to destroy their refineries; my administration will encourage them, regulate their products, make sure that they don’t pollute the environment, help them to get the crude oil at the cheapest possible price and suffocate everywhere with properly refined oil; incidentally information reaching us now says that Libya, as of this moment is selling one litre of PMS at N52.

“If Libya, an African nation can be selling PMS at N52 a litre and we are selling our own officially at more than a thousand naira a litre, something is wrong with us.

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