“Progress
would not happen without a change in citizens’ attitudes Nigeria’s President
Muhammadu Buhari said as he called for “unruly behaviour” in the country to
end.
The call, made in his first Independence Day address as civilian president, will likely remind some of his time as military ruler in the 1980s, when he cracked down on so-called “indiscipline”.
The call, made in his first Independence Day address as civilian president, will likely remind some of his time as military ruler in the 1980s, when he cracked down on so-called “indiscipline”.
Then, civil servants were
made to do star jumps if they were late for work, orderly queueing was
enforced, while traders selling goods at above agreed rates were punished.
Buhari, elected in March on
an agenda for “change”, has been at pains to stress there will be no return to
the past, despite claims to the contrary by his political opponents that old
habits die hard.
In a brief televised
address to the nation on Thursday, he said: “Change does not just happen. You
and I and all of us must appreciate that we all have our part to play if we
want to bring change about.
“We must change our lawless
habits, our attitude to public office and public trust. We must change our
unruly behaviour in schools, hospitals, market places, motor parks, on the
roads, in homes and offices.
“To bring about change, we
must change ourselves by being law-abiding citizens.”

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