Aisha Buhari And That BBC Interview By Reuben Abati
Read his piece below...
Public communication is one of the most delicate challenges that people in public life face, either in the corporate or the public sector. Many people suddenly find themselves in high places, and they become a source of news, a potential interview subject, and they get chased around by journalists and other media figures who want a story, in fact, not just a story, but a scoop.
I used to explain in communication coaching classes and to
the bosses whose media I managed, at one point or the other that they should
never feel obliged to say things they do not want to say. No matter how
aggressive the journalist may be, they should be careful what they say.
A journalist
would make you feel at home, he or she may even reassure you that whatever you
don’t want published could be edited out, and that if you don’t feel
comfortable with a question, you should feel free to keep quiet. But a good
journalist knows how to push you into a corner and get you, through follow up
questions, to say things you may not ordinarily want to say. By the time the
tape starts rolling, and you are encouraged to feel like a star, and your own
tongue starts rolling, you’d be surprised the kind of emphasis, what you
consider an innocent remark, would receive when it is published. Point is: journalists, while on duty, are not
working for politicians or big men and women; they are working for
organizations that need stories that can sell. They want scoops that can make
the headlines. That is what makes them journalists: getting the good story, the
good comments, the good shots.
After reading
the interview granted by First Lady Aisha Buhari on BBC Hausa Service, I was
tempted to conclude that this is what may have happened. She could have said
the same things in a more delicately phrased manner. I have always held the view that anybody at
all in a public position should be sent for media training (including how to
deliver speeches, poise, pronunciation skills, even basic grammar lessons)
before they are unleashed on a Nigerian public that has learnt to subject the
lives of public officials to utmost scrutiny.
The Aisha Buhari interview also fell short in this regard. She just gave
the BBC Hausa service a scoop, which in my view has done more damage to her
husband’s politics than good.
Given the
enormous effect that the interview has had on the public, I would have expected
that by now, she would perhaps have tactically disowned it, put a spin on it
somehow, and make it clear that it is not intended in any way to discredit, or
criticize her husband’s administration. But nothing of such has happened. And
what does that mean? That the interview was deliberate and that she is standing
by every word she said. She has been called the “good lady in the Villa.” She
has been praised for being a modern wife who can speak up, and exercise her
right to free speech. She has been called fearless and assertive. The only
thing I have not heard from some of the hypocritical commentators is that she
would be a good Presidential candidate for 2019.
I have also
been told that she must have spoken out of frustration and that her public
outburst about the existence of a cabal in the Villa, which determines who gets
what appointment, to the disadvantage of members of the All Progressives
Congress is making APC members who feel left out of the power-sharing process,
very unhappy. But her outburst is nothing but a poor understanding of power politics.
There will always be cabals around the seat of power. Power is so potent the
people around the corridor will never leave it alone to the President.
And if it is
true that this cabal or the President has recruited non-APC members into the government,
then that is a positive thing, it is also a positive thing that the President
does not know many of the people he has appointed. He doesn’t need to know them
personally as long as they come from all parts of Nigeria and they are
competent men who can get the job done. The First Lady seems to assume that
only card-carrying members of the APC should work for the Buhari
administration. On a positive note, however, she doesn’t want anybody to hijack
her husband’s Presidency and she believes those who are trying to do so do not
mean well. But what does that say about her husband?
The First Lady is
also of the view that if the present trend continues, she cannot campaign for
her husband in 2019 should he decide to seek re-election. She sounded pleased
with what is being done to ensure security in the North East, but she gave the
impression that she doesn’t think her husband has done enough to merit a second
term in 2019. Hear her: “What I fear is
the uprising of 15.4 million people”.
And consider this: “…Nobody thought it is going to be like this. But now
that it is so…Sometimes when one is doing something wrong without him knowing,
but when people talk to them, they should listen”. Who is that person doing
something wrong and who does not listen?
Altogether, Mrs
Aisha Buhari has passed the equivalent of a vote of no confidence in her
husband, and the people around him. This
is a kind of “home trouble” brought to
the public. The biggest challenge a man can face is to have his own wife “fight”
him in public. And what has happened is both unprecedented and significant
considering that a Hausa-Fulani couple is involved. It is probably the first time a lady in this
position would publicly upbraid her husband and his team. Is she furious because
she has been scorned, ignored, rendered powerless?
Well, even if we
were not privy to other details, she was publicly scorned when her husband sent
a volcanic message from Germany that she should go back to her place in the
“kitchen, the living room and the other room.”
Feminists and critics of misogyny have protested over this, quite
rightly too, at a time when women are leading countries and corporations, it is
incorrect and insensitive to say that the best place for a First Lady is to be
a cook, a living-room-soap opera-watching detainee and a bedroom object. But
given the cultural circumstances involved, this may well be the future Aso
Villa fate of First Lady Aisha Buhari. She could be marked out as an ambitious
woman who wants to share power with her husband, and as a threat to her
husband’s politics.
See how much
damage has been caused already by the President’s counter-response: The German
Chancellor glared at our President when she heard that comment about “the
kitchen, the living room and the other room.”
She quickly ended their press conference. Angela Merkel is married, and
she is Chancellor, but I don’t think her husband would dare tell her she is
best fit for the kitchen and the other room. And imagine if Theresa May, Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, Oby Ezekwesili, Grace Alele-Williams, Omobola Johnson,
Chimamanda Adichie, Joke Jacobs… had all been chained down in the “other
room”. No wonder, President Buhari’s
local opponents are already making big political capital out of his un-Presidential
comments, and the German public is shocked that any world leader could be so
politically incorrect. The number of jokes and memes that have been designed
around this husband-wife exchange are thoroughly amusing. Mrs Buhari has also
handed over to critics of this administration, speaking points that would be
exploited all the way till 2019, and she may well end up not as a powerful
force in the Villa but as a strong voice for women’s rights.
It is possible
she may be advised soon to recruit spin-doctors to do damage control, but she
may have left that rather late already. On the other hand, there is no amount
of damage control that the President’s spin-doctors can sell to anyone.
Whatever happens, she is cultivating a reputation as a different kind of First
Lady. Since independence, every Nigerian
Head of State or President has enjoyed the support of his wife while in office:
strong, fanatical support. Mrs Maryam Abacha was so supportive of her husband,
while everybody condemned him, and long after his death, she has continued to
celebrate his memory. Before her, Mrs Maryam Babangida brought greater colour
and celebrity status to the Office of the First Lady and added much value to
her husband’s tenure.
Mrs Fati
Abubakar was a dignified presence behind her husband, the same with Mrs
Margaret Shonekan. President Olusegun Obasanjo had as First Lady, the very
elegant and beautiful Stella Obasanjo who mobilized support and goodwill for
her husband. Turai Yar’Adua, wife of the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua was
also so devoted to her husband’s cause, she was declared the head of the Aso
Rock cabal. No one doubted her determination to protect her husband’s interest
during those critical moments. You all know Mrs Patience Jonathan. She was as First
Lady, her husband’s most vocal supporter. This brought her at loggerheads with
some sections of the public who objected to her prominence and controversial
statements, but not once did she or the other First Ladies before her,
criticize their husbands in public.
Elsewhere,
First Ladies also support their husbands. With all the reported cases of
dalliance and cuckoldry during the Bill Clinton Presidency, Hillary Clinton
stood by her husband. Michelle Obama has
also proven to be a very good role model in this regard. Certain positions require careful grooming.
Any form of tension in the home could distract a political leader and make him
seem vulnerable in the eyes of the public. Mrs Aisha Buhari may have spoken her
mind, but she should not make a habit of assuming the role of a radical,
in-house critic, throwing her husband under the wheels. She ought to be thoroughly embarrassed by all
the fun being poked at her husband because of that BBC Hausa interview she
granted. How this matter is resolved between their kitchen and “the other room”
is a family affair into which we cannot dabble.
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