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“The fear of Buhari” whips Nigeria into shape – and Africa just might be carried along with it

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

By Dan Aceda

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari

If Nigeria moves, then Africa moves. If not, then we must wait.

I do not remember where I first came across the quote above, but as a Kenyan I could never find a good reason to agree with it. That was until I begun to interact closely with Nigeria.

Over the past 2 years I have been a part of the Vecna Cares team that is working on designing and implementing an electronic health records tech tool for low resource settings in several states in Nigeria.

I am just concluding my second trip to Nigeria in 2 years. The first time out, I spent all my time in the capital Abuja and its’ outskirts – the Federal Capital Territory. This second time, I swam in the ‘belly of the monster’, venturing to some of the smaller rural towns of Ondo State, and then wound up my trip in the Lekki area of Lagos.

I have since changed my stance. There is no doubt in my mind that Nigeria moves Africa.

This is a huge country. The number that I was operating on when I first arrived was 140 million people strong. But having spoken to a few people here and seen it for myself, I dare say that we should be pegging that number at about 190 million if not 200 million.

One of the most mind-boggling statistics that I heard is that Nigeria now has 120 million active cell phone users.

I am here shortly after an election that saw a former military dictator win by a landslide.

Think about that for a minute. Where else in the world would such a sentence be written, read out aloud and make sense?

It is said that before President Buhari’s first stint as leader of Nigeria, back in the 1980s, Lagos was a hub for drug trafficking. Upon his assumption of office, he decreed that drug trafficking would, from then on, be a capital offence. He then back-dated the law and declared that all those that were in prison, having been convicted for it, would be executed. Needless to say, the drug trade ground to a halt – or so the story goes.

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