
Author and political columnist, Okey Ndibe has written on the medical vacation of President Muhammadu Buhari
Ndibe is of the opinion that the 
president should consider handing in his resignation letter because of 
his ill-health, adding that Nigerians will pay the president to quit at 
this stage.
‘’I’m aware that some 
Nigerians still consider Mr. Buhari essential, if not indispensable, to 
our country’s prospect of rebirth. 
''To
 these, a suggestion that the man ought to quit office must sound 
heretical—indeed seem like a prescription with a dollop of ghastly 
mischief. But such people are grandly deluded,’’ he wrote.
Ndibe stated that concrete ideas,
 not the cult of any particular personality, are best for a polity in 
need of ethical rejuvenation. 
‘’And two years of Mr. Buhari’s tenure as president are adequate to demonstrate his paucity of ideas,’’ he opined. 
The author suggests that the president’s 
reputation and goodwill are enough, saying what Nigeria needs is robust 
and organic ideas.
He also queried the
 president’s war on corruption, lamenting that the Buhari’s 
administration has failed to achieve the conviction of one significant 
political figure from the recent past.
He wrote:
 ‘’If Mr. Buhari’s government has not been able to prosecute Mr. Dasuki 
to date, is there much hope of his administration making a noticeable 
dent in the war against corruption via prosecutorial means? I don’t 
think so.’’
Ndibe noted that Buhari’s 
much-vaunted crusade against graft has neither dampened nor discouraged 
the appetite for corruption in Nigeria. 
He
 pointed out that the Nigerian security and para-military agencies are 
still fleecing Nigerians of their money by demanding for bribes. 
He
 also noted that judicial processes operate at snail-speed; lawyers and 
judges collude in using incessant adjournments to derail justice. 
He also accused the president of not taking any steps when political appointees close to him have been accused of corrupt acts.
‘’If
 the Buhari brand ever represented antipathy to corruption, that image 
is now profoundly tarnished. At its core, corruption in Nigeria remains 
as vibrant and resilient as ever. 
''If
 there’s a scaling back in levels of embezzlement, it owes less to the 
Buhari effect than to the significant decline in oil revenues,’’ Ndibe wrote.
He
 further stated that President Buhari’s resignation is unassailable, 
adding that any seriously sick president deserves the time and space to 
focus on his health. 
He wrote: ‘’He
 can hardly do so while shouldering the burden of running a complex and 
beleaguered country. Besides, Nigeria is beset by grave crises that 
appear to worsen by the day. 
‘’Nigerians deserve a leader at the 
height of mental and physical fitness, a president endowed with the 
agility and energy to wrestle with his country’s deep-rooted problems.
‘’The
 trouble is not just that Mr. Buhari is enfeebled by age and illness. 
The greater issue is that he presides over a country that is manifestly 
sicker than he. 
‘’The idea that an ailing man can effectively mind the business of a more seriously sick country is, quite simply, absurd.‘’

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