By  Folusho Daniel

FOR so long, many Nigerians have been attempting to study and decode President Muhammadu Buhari, using different lenses. Some only had a clue on who he may be, counting on the code of information they obtained from the media when he first romped into global limelight as the Nigerian head of state in a military garb.
During that military era, Buhari occurred to a section of expectant Nigerians as a no-nonsense dictator with a brazen disposition to power. Pairing in leadership with the late Brigadier Tunde Idiagbon, adjudged as restless, hardworking and unsmiling made the Buhari regime almost a nightmare for Nigerians who took business as usual all through the period he reigned as Head of State.
Nigeria was in a rot when he took over in 1983. Indiscipline and corruption were in great synergy to incinerate the glory that Nigeria carried from independence. The sacked civilian government presided over by former President Shehu Shagari operated recklessly. Cabinet members acted like heists with moral bankruptcy while being less patriotic in the judgement of many. When the Buhari military regime came on board, frustrated Nigerians troop to the streets in wild celebration. The reproach thrown up by the rising tide of social vices in all parts of the country after the collapse of Second Republic made the War Against Indiscipline (WAI) launched by his government very compelling. Nigerians were remolded by WAI in conduct and character while the government enforced discipline all through. From then on, Buhari struck gold in popularity that lingered with him till he got elected as president on May 29, 2015.
For President Buhari, history appears to be on re-hearse, as the throwback of mismanaged opportunities, which Nigeria suffered under the government of Shagari, seems to be on display again. In simple terms, the government of former President Goodluck Jonathan offered Nigerians mirrors of infractions, excesses and lack of focus akin to what political players exhibited in the Second Republic.
Nigeria gravitated towards the precipice under the government of former President Jonathan. In that government, acts of corruption ballooned uncontrollably, leading to growing terrorism, insecurity and other heinous social vices. The battered Nigerian electorate craved for the emergence of a Messiah. Again, Buhari emerged to play the role.
For President Buhari, however, saving Nigeria from imminent collapse entails a fight against corruption, terrorism and the need to re-grow the economy. He also needs to engage the swarming army of the unemployed in Nigeria in the productive sector. These are daunting challenges, which he needs to address in a short time. Yet, Nigerians appear unprepared to appreciate the enormity of the challenge and dilemma that Buhari’s government faces day and night in efforts to correct the ills of the past, while taking off with the change mantra.
It is not in doubt that the President has fully addressed his mind to bring about the changes that Nigeria needs. Those who work closely with him attest to his desire and determination to take Nigeria out of the woods. The aggregate view is that he needs to be fully understood by Nigerians who want to know where he aims to take their country. Buhari is said to start his day, leaving no one around him in doubt that the ‘change’ that he preaches must start from his own office.
The President leads by example. He is said to be desirous of building up institutions that will outlive him. He is also said to depend on his protocol department to operate hitch-free standards on crowd control in the seat of government.  The president is a stickler  for time with perceived determination to change the poor attitude of Nigerians on time matters. He attends events on schedule, gradually sweeping off all elements of time wasting that had for years led to waste of public funds. Under him, guests at events are never kept waiting for hours in a manner they were used to with past Presidents and leaders.
By his body language, President Buhari appears not keen on living in the opulence that the presidential power offers. His close aides attest to the fact that the President eats moderately, dons moderate attires, rides in “posh-less” official cars, while he most eagerly avoids any act likely to generate a scandal.  Although, there have been complaints about  the long list of foreign travels he had made so far, only a few people know that President Buhari, all along, has not been collecting allowances, or rather estacodes, contrary to insinuations. He is said to be content with arrangements made for his comfort by host countries. Buhari is also noted to have pruned down the number of officials on his entourage on every trip as a means of saving cost. Before Buhari came to power, successive Presidents saw nothing wrong in subjecting Abuja residents to long grueling hours of discomfort in traffic gridlocks with roadblocks to ease their movements in and out of Abuja. President Buhari has put a stop to that, offering  relief by flying in helicopters to his destinations, most especially to free the traffic along the Airport Road.
President Buhari once went to an open eid-ground in Abuja for prayers and surprisingly found himself surrounded by more than a mammoth crowd of admirers, all surging to catch a glimpse of him. The stampede which ensued in the process reportedly touched the President who immediately resolved to limit his spiritual exercises to the Presidential Villa as a way out. For Nigerians who crave to understand the President better, Ministers and heads of government agencies have been having the free will to display initiatives while not being emasculated. According to reports, President Buhari only acts as an enabler, a guide for ensuring that the plans by his government to re-invent Nigeria work in the long run.  The desire by the President to allow institutional growth and development is the reason he hardly meddles in the affairs of the other arms of government; the legislature and judiciary, which he feels have the internal mechanism to make adjustments each time they err.
By now, critics should be aware that the success President Buhari has been recording in the fight against terrorism and corruption, the process of regenerating the economy through diversification as well as his cost-saving initiatives, are a testament that his government is on the right track towards bringing back hope for the citizens.    Today, under the government of President Buhari, the railway system is staging a comeback in Nigeria. The government, having launched the commercial operation of Abuja-Kaduna train services, is to commence the second phase; the Lagos-Ibadan rail project already captured in the 2016 budget. As proposed, the rail line will eventually terminate in Kano.

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Daniel writes from Abuja