The
Senior Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, stoked an
online controversy on Monday when he declared that age was not an important
consideration in the choice of ministers.
An
online protest had greeted the inclusion of Chief Audu Ogbeh in the first list
that President Muhammadu Buhari presented to the Senate for screening. Some
social media activists had described the nomination of Ogbeh as an avoidable
act of recycling.
Ogbeh
served the country as a Minister of Communications in 1982. Then, the late
Olusola Saraki, the father of the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, was among
the Senate session that screened Ogbeh.
About
33 years after that screening, Ogbeh faces another Senate session led by Bukola
from today (Tuesday) for another round of screening.
Diverse
jokes on Ogbeh’s nomination had flooded the Internet since #TheList was
unveiled, just as some of the names contained have been enmeshed in
controversies.
Reacting
to the one on the age issue, Adesina, on Monday, declared that “age does not
matter.”
The
spokesperson, who has made several online remarks that turned controversial in
recent months, attempted to distinguish between what he called “mental age and
chronological age”. He argued that the former was much more relevant to
performance, which he urged Nigerians to focus on.
He
said the nominees qualified because they were Nigerians.
“People
who have been nominated are qualified and are Nigerians. Talking of age, there
is a saying that ‘age does not matter’.
“We
must rather talk of the mental age rather than the chronological age. It is not
the chronological age that matters,” Adesina, who was tweeting on #ministers,
posted.
He
also said the President would not be designated as a minister even though he
would supervise a ministry. Buhari said he would personally oversee the
Ministry of Petroleum Resources.
Adesina
said every state, in line with the provision of the Constitution, would get a
ministerial appointment.
He
said, “President Buhari is not going to be designated a minister but he will
supervise a ministry. He has all it takes to supervise a ministry.
“He
will respect the Constitution; the Constitution says a minister must be
appointed from each state.”
Adesina’s
tweets were received with outrage across
different social media platforms. Some of the youths who have, over the
years, complained about being excluded
from mainstream politics, condemned Adesina, whose statements trended on social
platforms for several hours.
Responding
through @sdatti06, Abubakar Sadiq tweeted, “Age matters; we want youths to be
involved in governance. We should remember that that was what Buhari and his
team promised during their campaign.”
Sadiq,
who copied Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osibanjo in his tweet, said Nigerian
youths would not get an opportunity to learn if the elders continued to
dominate the system.
Also
commenting on Adesina’s position, one Didy Arowo wondered why the President
ignored thousands of young Nigerians doing well in different endeavours, for
individuals old enough to retire from active service.
“There
are many qualified Nigerians out there; bring fresh people into the system. How
do we want to effect change in the system with the same old people that
destroyed it?” he asked.
With
the tweets recording thousands of critical responses on the Internet, some
online activists said the spokesman would run into a more serious trouble with
‘online citizens’ if he failed to take appropriate cautions.
Interestingly,
the Nigerian digital space is set for another engaging week as the @NGRSenate
has promised to tweet “details of curriculum vitae and credentials” of the
nominees during the screening.
Meanwhile,
about four months after their appointments, Adesina and his colleague, Garba
Shehu, still use unverified social media platforms to disseminate official
information.
Despite
the sensitive nature of their portfolios, they have yet to get their twitter
pages verified. This casts aspersion on the credibility of the accounts,
especially among the international community.
Adesina
and Shehu, the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, had low social
media profiles before they were appointed. But they have, in the past four
months, built a huge following.
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