InterviewsPolitics

2023;Nigeria desires a new narrative  –  presidential aspirant, Adewole Adebayo

Adewole Adebayo is a lawyer, private entrepreneur with interest in broadcast media and others sectors. In this interview with a select media, the youthful entrepreneur insists that Nigerians are in dare need for a change that would touch the people’s life.The AUTHORITY was represented

You are relatively unknown on Nigeria’s political structure, how do you intend to market your manifesto before the teeming population? 
As you know. I’m Adewole Adebayo, I’m a Nigerian and I’m from Ondo state. I’m a lawyer and I live in Abuja. I have spent most of my life in different parts of the country and in many countries of the word. I practice law and I’m also involved in some other private sector activities. We all know that our country has to elect a new leader next year in 2023 and since 1999 when we decided to go the civilian way, we have elected many governments and most of the objectives -the national programmes we have set for ourselves have not not only been disconnect, many of the games that we thought were secure have now come under threat . in this country today the most painful and dangerous thing that is happening is that the oneness and unity of this country is under threat and it is not only under threat by those who are at the periphery of power, those who are marginalised, it’s under threat even from those who have benefitted or who have defined the identity from what Nigeria has given to them. So there is no holy ground anymore, there is no common ground on most issues. A country can do well with a very good government and a country can also still manage to get bad with a very bad government because there will be another time to elect a good one. And the lessons you learn when you have a bad government helps you to appreciate a good government when it comes and to be serious to run it. However, there’s a culture which we’re resolving into and that’s the culture that is dangerous, a culture where failure has become successors to failure and those who aspire to leadership do not extol their own virtues anymore, they only say well, I have vices but the vices of the other side are even worse than mine. And that’s what happens to Nigeria today. We have the All Progressives Congress (APC), which came to power in 2015, on the mantra of change and the issues that we are confronted with that time -security, corruption unemployment and generally bad infrastructure and low currency management. Now that government had a second term, have had seven years plus to put their change into action. What we got from them is change for the worse. The insecurity is now worse and taking a new dimension – banditry, killing and all sorts of threat to human life –  The infrastructure we’ve not see much of it, but we still have a lot of debt. The foreign exchange has gotten worse. It couldn’t have been worse than what it was before but they managed to make it worse.  Now we have no employment and staple food and basic things have gone up and the country is being given an excuse that well, as bad as the APC government is, its badness came from the previous government of PDP. And we have in the opposition the PDP which goes without apology that it ran a very bad government but it’s always taunting us saying okay, you see we ran a very bad government but look at the one you replaced us with, they are even worse than us. So let us come back and run another bad government for you because we have a franchise for running a bad government. So when you are having these raised to the bottom, in your analysis, you discover that it’s time for ordinary citizens to come out. There are five reasons why I’m coming out. One, to give hope to Nigerians again because hope is that commodity that costs you nothing but through this hope you get other things. And Nigerians we used to have it, it was common to us in the Guiness Book of Records, any message, any survey you do, will tell you that Nigerians are the happiest people in the world and you cannot be happy if you are hopeless. So the government has robbed us of that hope and Nigerians now, for the first time since civilisation, Nigerians now believe that “tomorrow no go better.” But tomorrow go better used to be our motto in this country that the person who had the worst day will be sure that tomorrow would be better. That has been stolen from us. So we need to come out and bring a new narrative to show that we have hope. 
Second, there’s these private treaties that politicians sign with one another, it’s a conspiracy of perpetual underdevelopment whereby you meet and say well, let me help you to come to power. You do it anyhow you want to do it, people are happy or not, then you rotate it to me, you also help me to come there. So the equation does not include the people. I thought that what we should do is to listen to what people are saying and you see many people who are coming out to run, they always say they helped Buhari to come to power or they helped somebody to come to power in the past and they are promised that it is their turn but no one is mentioning the people. So I thought that we should come out and let people know that whatever bounced cheque you are given out on the corridors of power, it is not binding on the people. People want to elect a government that comes from them. 
The 3rd issue is that of recent we’ve been having leadership crisis where gross incompetence is exaggerating ordinary problems to look unsolvable and if you do analysis and listen to the media and listen to government people talking, you will think that the simple task of removing refuse from the gutter or from the way is so  difficult to do. Everybody is telling you that government is mysterious and managing and sustaining foreign exchange is difficult to do, that giving employment to people is difficult to do, closing IDP camps is difficult to do, putting a bullet in the head of the bandit or terrorist is difficult to do. Everything is difficult to do and it gives you a feeling why Nigerians have become metaphysical. Everything is committed to prayer because it is believed that this is beyond belief. If you had a lion in a and a goat in a cage and you and you come back the next day, the lion is dead and the goat is alive, people would start to wonder, something is wrong and that is what is happening between the government and Boko Haram and bandits. So they are trying to depress the people mentally
Then the fourth element is lack of  professionalism across board. Every institution has been compromised . Every institution is there to serve those who are incumbent, whether it’s the police, judiciary, army, DSS, whatever institution, insurance, whatever. Once you set institution up, those who are in government, those who are supposed to work in those institutions, strengthen them, leave them alone for the next person to take over, privatise and personalise these institutions. So these institutions start to conflict. So you find out that DSS is fighting EFCC, EFCC is fighting police, police is fighting army, the Airforce does not want to give air cover to the soldier because it’s fighting with the Chief of Army Staff, the NSA does not greet the Chief of Army Staff, everything is upside down. These institutions which are supposed to be complementary and work with one another to give continuity to the state have been personalised by those who are there and the character and indiscipline of those who are there is now reflecting on these institutions. So the new people who go there pay money to enter because they see these institutions as a means of exploiting the people. 
They don’t go there reflecting the philosophy of the institutions and lastly and very importantly, is the question of the role of money in politics. Everybody will tell you that you first have to be s thief before you look for public office or you have to go and register your name among those people who are thieves so that they can sponsor you. 
They don’t believe the ordinary Nigerian, can come out and vie for any office in the country and offer a platform. So we thought that we  should do this. And for me personally, it would be a case of gross malpractice for me and for all that Nigeria has done for me, 


What political party platform are you aspiring for the president?   


Let me start with the political party. i didn’t mention a political party because its obvious that I can never, in as much as in expect the right thinking Nigerian to pitch their tent with the APC which is currently misbehaving or the PDP which set the good standard for misbehaviour. What I think that we should do is to find an alternative to the two of them and it is not hard to find an alternative because they have been doing merger of themselves.

If you look at the Presidential Villa, just look at those who are working there, who are principle officers, look at the federal executive council, look at so many other things you will see that it’s a unity government for the wrong people. They have come together  and PDP. They are two sides of one coin, so you have to throw the coin away. You cannot hold the coin and say you like one side of the coin  and you don’t like the other side of the coin because it is the same coin. For us, what we decided to do was to be a movement first. Because it is  a movement you know where you are going, then you can be a political party. 

What we have done is to start talking to different political parties and we have been having series of meetings to say that we do not want to make the mistake of 2019 where there are 79 of you saying the same thing and never working together. So we decided to work together. I’m not the leader of this movement; I’m just the presidential hopeful there and by virtue of movement discipline, by the end of this month, the movement will announce a political party. When you see the political party you will not be surprised. It would be what you imagine Nigerians should do in the first place, which is to coalesce together with serious-minded opposition to forming one platform any Nigerians what we need to do of finding a pathway and that’s what we are going to do and when that is announced you will know but they are readily existing political parties and coming together to join effort so that we will not have this merry go round that happens every four years between the PDP and APC.

How would you convince Nigerians that you are ordinary?


With respect to my ordinariness, I’m an ordinary Nigerian who has lived an extraordinary life. I have survived in spite of the mis-governance that is foisted on all of us. I haven’t taken any public office before and i don’t business with government. I wake up like any other Nigerian trying to make a sense out of the abundant opportunities that God has given us in this country and the way I have lived my life, I have done a enough of 50 years now and I have been a lawyer for over two decades. So my work, my association, you can go into the archives and see my interviews for the past twenty years with different media and so you don’t want to fall into the same trap of somebody coming to explain who I’m to you which was what happened in 2015. Whenever anybody is talking of an imaginary saviour, we didn’t look back to see what these persons stood for. So i have always been on the side of the ordinary people and what I’m bringing to focus is the fact that the average Nigerian who is well trained professionally is alright, is equipped with sufficient competencies to execute the office of the President of Nigeria. What is happening in Nigeria today is reflective of what is happening around us. That is to say, these great offices have been created to perform certain functions but people go to occupying these offices without attending to those duties. So it is a typical thing that happens to you in a police station. You can lie on the wall in a typical police station, they will talk about everything from morning till night, they are not going to pay attention about how to fight crime. And you manage to bring crime to them, they will look at you like you are at the wrong location. Unless you have private money to incentivise them, they are going leave there to work for you. I use it as an example to show to you that it is not only the presidency that is failing, go to you typical local government, the local government chairman is not going to go around looking for potholes to fill he going to be attending weddings or follow the governor somewhere.So these offices are there to serve the people. Why it looks like we are having bad government is because we are having no government at all. What we are having is continuous politics. So you can find governor of Sokoto state will spend a lot of time with the governor of Rivers to commission some things in Rivers or plot politics, he would not pay attention to his state. It happens at the federal level; you like at the Ministers, you look at the Federal Executive Council, they only go there to award contracts every Wednesday. Nobody asks questions of the contract they awarded before, No minister is going round giving feedback to the president. I can tell you categorically and you can ask them, there are Ministers who spend four years in government, they don’t see the president probably for three times. There is a  general abandonment of duty and where duties are abandoned, it makes it look like the work is had to do and you had to now come from heaven to come and president of Nigeria. No. Many of our colleagues all over the world have carried their professional competencies to public offices and because they do the work, they may make one or two mistakes along the way, but they actually pay attention to the work and every other person pay attention to their own work, and they are able to get governance going. It’s not as if you have to be perfect but you have to be perfectly ready to do the work and I can tell you that the presidency of Nigeria is being given like a reward for many years of experience in politics of non performance.  So if you have been there for sometime and those who are within the levers of power will say “well we know him, he’s going to be generous to us, so let’s support him, it’s never about whether the person is competent and if you look at the task and the challenges facing the presidency in Nigeria today in terms of security, in terms of the economy, in terms of social cohesion, being a good head if state which is to be father to everyone or mother if the person is a woman, to everybody in the country so that when you are in the Villa it doesn’t matter which state or local government, ethnic group or religion you belong to , you feel like you are at home and if there’s a problem in any part of the country the president will deal with it with the same equality.  So that is the skill you find in every enterprise that I have led. I don’t have a problem of that nature.

How can you bridge the dichotomy between North and South?
I don’t see any North and South. My parents are from Ondo state. I have lived majority of my adult life in the northern part of the country. I have lived overseas as well and anywhere Nigerians meet one another, the issue of north and south does not occur. When bandits waylay a vehicle on the  highway, they don’t say northerners pay less ransom than a southerners. When Buhari managed his fantastic economic idea that allowed rice to go from N7,000 to N35,000 there is no special price for northerners or special price for southerners. When you are suffering injury having plunged the pothole on the highway, everybody in the vehicle either going to die or get injured;  there is no issue of north and south in it. So I think that we need to be serious. If you look at the new calamity they are cooking in the villa now where they want us yo pay through our noses to buy fuel and they are trying increase the fuel to N400 or whatever figure they are threatening our lives with there’s no price for northerners, there is no price for southerners.

So I think we should understand that these are artificial practices which they use to take power among themselves, it does not apply to Nigerians. What I expect to see is that the rotation of the power should come from the people. The upper echelon, the elite who are the inheritors of powers transferred by the military in 1999 have been rotating the powers among themselves; its high time the president comes from the people and if the president comes from the people, it would have the agenda of the people and you will see the way we will run our campaign, you will see that we are coming from the people. We know their problems and those are the problems we are coming to solve and so I don’t have a problem of north and south and I can live someone for so long without even knowing where their state of origin is and for those who think that’s the politics they want to emphasize, we will tell them that they are wrong. If you go to the armed forces today, those who are dying in the fronts in Sambisa, in the northeast, in everywhere, both southerners and northerners take the bullet together, Christian, moslem, non believers or whatever believers take the  bullet together and even Boko Haram, bandits they  attack mosques, they attack churches, they attack indiscriminately, there is no holy ground. So anyone who is still talking about north and south now, that’s one way to analyze who we are not going to work with at all.  If anybody comes to me out of office now or when I’m in office in the name of the north or south, that’s sufficient reason to walk such a person out of my office because i do not see that that is a major thing    

How do you convince the people to vote for you or your party which is yet unknown? 


The people are the ones trying to convince us. Because the people have articulated their problems. I don’t need to go to the youth and tell them what they are suffering; they have expressed it through EndSARS and the president of Nigeria went to Kaduna yesterday (2 weeks ago) and he got the kind of music he did not pay for. Those young people who were telling him “we are not with you”, they don’t need me, I have not started campaign but they already know they are not with him and when they say they are not with him, he’s still the angel among his colleagues.

So if Buhari, the proverbial ‘maigeskia’ was being booed in Kaduna, then you know what is in store for these big men and bigwomen who are holding the country down. So it is not us going to the people, its actually people calling on us to come out before they take the law into their hands. So anyone who sees us like this coming out, they should thank us because the next thing is that the people of this country are going to rise up and they are going to jettison the whole system.

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