Wednesday 7 January 2015

THE THREE PATH OF GENERAL BUHARI FROM TRAITORSHIP TO DICTATORSHIP TO A DEMONIZED MESSAIAH

GB

"General Buhari(rtd) is guilty of the Highest offence in Nigeria TREASON, what makes Treason a very serious issue is because it constitutes a crime not only against the Government but also an attack against the People of Nigeria, suspension of the most sacred Tool of our Political dispensation THE CONSTITUTION.
Somebody need to Remind Buhari that he cannot be the Messiah Nigerians seek, His 20 month rule in Nigeria is equivalent to the House of Horror under the Merciless Vamparist Rule of Count Dracula( The Blood sucking Undead demon who plague mankind).
Nigerians can never vote a certified Dictator nor A Proven Traitor the greatest Enemy of our dear state and Emerging Democracy. Unless maybe Buhari is on the last mission to subvert , rape, maimed and Destroy Nigeria Democracy maybe he have a strong Avid to return Nigeria to the Darkess Hours of Military Rule and Monumental horror.
Buhari regime attempted to stifle criticism. Journalists were harassed, and many critics were arrested. Symbolically, the arrest of the popular musician, Fela Ransome-Kuti, personified the crackdown. Ransome-Kuti's lyrics sharply mocked the government's inability to deal with national problems. The National Security Organisation (NSO) became the principal instrument of repression. The NSO, created in 1976, had played only a marginal role in Nigerian politics until the Buhari regime. Buhari appointed Rafindadi, a civilian, as head of the NSO, and under Rafindadi, Nigeria experienced the harassment and insecurity of a secret police force for the first time. Fortunately, the NSO proved to be inefficient, and subsequent reaction to its operations led to its reorganization.
Buhari's biggest problem was Nigeria's foreign debt. Negotiations with the International Monetary Fund dragged on, and in the end efforts to reschedule the debt failed. Although Buhari was committed to austerity, the IMF insisted on even more drastic measures to cut spending, devalue the currency, and otherwise restructure the economy than most Nigerians were willing to accept. Buhari had to accede to the strong and vocal opposition to the IMF terms. Nigerian nationalism won out over economic necessity, at least in the short run. Furthermore, by the end of 1985 there was considerable frustration within the army. The army had been reduced in size steadily since the end of the civil war, from a total of about 275,000 in 1969 to about 80,000 by the end of the 1980s. The economic crisis, the campaign against corruption, and civilian criticism of the military undermined Buhari's position, and in August 1985 a group of officers under Major General Ibrahim Babangida removed Buhari from power.
The officers who staged the coup were mostly from the north, but unlike Buhari (of Hausa origin), they were mostly from minority ethnic groups. Babangida, for example, was of Gwari origin from Niger state. He was a member of the Supreme Military Council under the Murtala Muhammad, Obasanjo, and Buhari regimes and had been involved in the 1975 and 1984 coups. Lieutenant General Domkat Bali became chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Armed Forces Ruling Council (which succeeded the Supreme Military Council) was dominated by minority groups from the north. Some radicals and technocrats were appointed to ministerial positions.
Ifeduba ThankGod Tochukwu( Aguiyi Na Ozubulu)

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