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Buhari’s trips are not for enjoyment

By Garba Shehu
30 November 2015   |   12:41 am
I HAVE been amused, reading a number of jokes concerning the frequency of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s foreign trips. Questions have been raised about why so many visits, and what are the benefits Nigeria is getting? The critic is entitled to his opinion and nothing said here is intended to silence him or her. President…
President Buhari

President Buhari

I HAVE been amused, reading a number of jokes concerning the frequency of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s foreign trips.

Questions have been raised about why so many visits, and what are the benefits Nigeria is getting? The critic is entitled to his opinion and nothing said here is intended to silence him or her.

President Muhammadu Buhari came into office under the mantra of change. While Nigerians are yearning for change, you need someone who will set up the infrastructure, both at home and abroad for it. President Buhari is busy doing that.

The change is manifest in where he visits and what he does. In the delegations accompanying him abroad, President Buhari has slashed the numbers, bringing them down to a tolerable or the bearable minimum.

He went to the United Nations General Assembly in September with 32 officials in his delegation. These included his cook, his doctor and luggage officer. His predecessor in office went to the same meeting with 150 officials and family members the year before.

Wherever they are given government accommodation and feeding, members of President Buhari’s entourage receive reduced allowances, thereby saving the government some money. In public diplomacy, experts say that it is better conducted through face-to-face interaction than through third parties. This is even moreso at the level of heads of state. To do by it by proxy is to miss the effect of fostering strong interpersonal relations between leaders, by which nations benefit.

President Buhari has so far visited Germany, South Africa, USA, Niger, Tchad, Cameroon, Benin, Ghana, South Africa, India, Iran and Malta, where we are presently for the Commonwealth Summit. Mostly, these were due to either the United Nations, EU, African Union or energy and security-related summits. They were mostly undertaken to attend specific meetings, not State Visits. Looking at these assignments, the trips are inescapable for the President. What would Nigerians say of their leader when the array of world leaders assemble, as they would shortly be doing discussing climate change in Paris on Monday and their own President is missing from the table?

Those of us who were around under Abacha read all the taunts about him being a sit-at-home leader. Abacha was despised for not representing his country abroad.

President Buhari’s foreign visits have been marked by punishing schedules. They are always business-like and results-oriented. The President has had to travel overnight for some of these meetings. The visit by any president to another country is the highest act in international relations. It sends out a message that that country is important to the visitor.

In foreign policy, you stand on a quick sand of events and you slip up if you take a rest or lose focus. Governments also know that their achievements at home will be meaningless if they cannot project them abroad. Who or where are the foreign investors, whose hand you are seeking if you can’t travel to meet them? Will they come if they don’t know about the country? President Buhari demonstrated a keen understanding of these when in the first week of his taking the office, he brought together foreign policy and all three cardinal objectives of his administration – security, economy and war on corruption – by embarking on visits to neighbouring countries.

In our recent history, this country has suffered past isolation of various types, including the denial of access to the arms-purchase market. It is important for a country to do the right things all the time and two, you don’t know the joy being a part of international gatherings until you suffer the pain of exclusion from them.

There is no reason to be angry with anyone criticising President Buhari for travelling abroad. In politics, even if President Buhari were to bring with him a suitcase full of cash and a pot gold each time he returned from a trip, someone will criticise him, saying that the journey is wasteful.

The PDP will kick, knowing that they got 16 years and did nothing with it. Those who didn’t do much during their term of governance will find it instructive to fault whatever the President is doing.

If President Buhari is successful as a leader, the PDP will be history. He is doing a great job and the fruits are here, and many more will soon come. He is working to strengthen diplomatic relations, trade and the security of our nation. He holds serious meetings with serious investors and has fetched us investments in the range of billions of U.S. Dollars.

Now, countries such as France, UK, the U.S. are supporting Nigeria with intelligence, weapons and training for our military against Boko Haram and the economic saboteurs in the Delta region.

All heads of countries around the world now take Nigeria seriously. His foreign trips are for business, security of the country and bilateral contacts – contacts that get actualised by follow-ups and the love and support a leader enjoys at home and abroad.

Today the world is in a warm embrace of President Muhammadu Buhari.

Nigerians should be proud of the attention, love and admiration, importance, respect and investment he is bringing to Nigeria. These trips are not for enjoyment.

Lastly, to answer those who ask all the time, what is he bringing back home?

We are not a country of beggars. It is good if something is in the bag as the leader comes home from a trip. Culturally, we never return home from a trip without a souvenir for everyone left at home. Yes, it is good he declares something upon his return. But the most important task for the President at this time is to reset the image of Nigeria abroad, given the damage it sustained over many years in the past.

So far, in fairness, the President has projected a large image of Nigeria and of himself which should be a matter of pride for all our citizens. Marketing of Brand Nigeria can never be more important than currently it is. The President is doing a great job for the nation. He needs to be supported.

• Shehu is Senior Special Assistant to the President, SSAP (Media and Publicity)

3 Comments

  • Author’s gravatar

    Guardian, why wont you guys publish my response to this piece?

  • Author’s gravatar

    As the Snr Special Assistance on Media and Publicity to the President, you are
    just doing what you are expected to do, so no blames for you sir. However,
    everything we see on ground today is in complete contradiction to the rosy
    picture you tried painting. I doubt Nigerians are convinced at all by this
    script. You may say he took over a battered economy.

    • Author’s gravatar

      The least he could have done was to maintain our economy at the status he met it while driving his
      anti-corruption agenda (albeit a real and true non-vindictive anti-corruption
      process). But look at what we have today? – Investor confidence is at its
      lowest, Naira is in free fall like we have never seen in 20 years, our stocks
      have so fallen as the worst in Africa second only to Zimbabwe (you get my
      drift?)