Confirmation has come that President Muhammmadu
Buhari will be going to America this month. This going to America should not
only be different from that of the African prince portrayed by Eddie Murphy, it
should be different from that which marked both the beginning of the Yar’Adua
and Jonathan presidencies. This going to America for an ailing nation of great
potential must be a concrete effort at forging partnerships in pursuit of the
great goal of the Great Escape from misery for the biggest concentration of the
people of Africa descent.
Going to America has always been a matter laced
with Irony. As a young youth corps member reporting for the Newbreed
newsmagazine some 38 years ago, I wrote a story that pointed to Army
Intellectual, Olusegun Obasanjo, criticising African leaders journeying to
America. As head of state then, Obasanjo had evidently forgotten his old
quips,
and was preparing for a journey to America.
I have never thought of going to America a
problem. The mindset of “America their America” offered by one of our literary
giants was not my own frame. What my concern always was and remains the issue
for this visit, is, how to go beyond ceremonials and photo opps to handshakes
that produce mutually beneficial outcomes. For the US and Nigeria this has to
include in today’s context a boosting of capacity for security and economic
advancement in Nigeria and trade opportunities with new markets for American
products where there is comparative advantage that does not depress prospects
for sustainable development in a country of prospects.
With security problems in Nigeria’s North-East
threatening efforts to reduce the scourge of poverty, disease, and a brutish
state of nature, a huge infrastructure deficit, financing gaps that have left
even salaries unpaid for months, partnerships with foreign powers need be obsessively
focused on relationships that can help bridge gaps and uplift the Nigerian
condition.
In this regard, I am persuaded that with we, as
Nigeria, should unveil a clear national strategy anchored on latent comparative
advantage based on select factor endowments in which value chains in which we
are quite competitive are developed into global markets. With the Chinese
understanding of the benefits of industrial policy in building such values
chains, we should not be shy to do infrastructure deals around industrial parks
with them. In the same way, opportunities for partnerships with the South
Koreans, Japanese and with the Australians in mining and road infrastructure
should not be allowed to slip by. With the Americans, so much can be done with
power, services, technology and education. We need to expand our fast growing
education and health sectors. With so many Nigerians of the Diaspora active in
the US in these areas, the trip should be used to build bridges. We just saw
reports of a meeting of Nigerian physicians in the US which took place in
Orlando Florida. We should tag into that to be a medical tourism hub.
What a visit such as this must do is provide the
opportunity for President Buhari to find that one quiet moment to provide
assurance of lasting goodwill if specific support with arms, equipment and
intelligence to accelerate ending the insurgency, is offered. A clear shopping
list is helpful and a pointer to an appropriate desk officer to serve as a
clearing house should be determined. We should neither play the subservient
with a begging nor our protocol laced meeting of equal sovereigns, friends
don’t ask who is bigger. They know.
We miss much running around at the highest levels
with much concerns when the ambassador can court the right desk officer and get
things moving. If President Buhari can convey the warmth of friendship,
passion, and selfless giving of self for the good of a country that has been
unfairly treated, he could get a useful nod from President Barack Obama that
his people can work with. He needs to have a few of those critical people with
him. He must not leave the impression the ones before him left, that there is
no capacity or interest in making promises bear fruit. Our failure to profit
from the African Growth and Opportunities Act is a case in point.
In that sense, an opportunity to thank Obama for
the Power Up Africa initiative with specific requests for how it can help
reduce the darkness of our patch of earth at night and put many to work, so
Boko Haram will find it harder to find recruits should be clearly stated. Here,
it will be nice to nicely apologise for our tardiness with AGOA, and pledge
that in the spirit of change and new beginnings in Nigeria, the economy of
Nigeria will be more engaged with an AGOA extension.
President Buhari will profit much from elevating
the tone by showing resolve to wholeheartedly fight corruption. America helps
with tracking and repatriating money stolen from the Nigerian people. This
should be requested.
If change is to result in dividends for the
Nigerian people, President Buhari’s visit to Washington must not be a visit
from the leftovers. It must be worked at so it becomes a journey into a
welcoming mat for a strategic partner. When President Jimmy Carter’s 1977 world
tour that would have brought him from Europe into Africa was terminated in
Europe, due to urgent developments at home, a rescheduling was done. On
resumption in 1978, the visit to Nigeria was dubbed, by one of America’s
newsmagazines, as “Carter’s journey to the leftovers.” We owe it to our
children that this visit to Washington not to be seen as another visit from the
leftovers.
Punch
Punch
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