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Sunday 27 August 2017

Garba Shehu, Presidential Villa Rodents and Bad PR

By Farooq A. Kperogi, PhD.

Twitter: @farooqkperogi

People who know that presidential spokesman Malam Garba Shehu was my undergraduate 
journalism teacher never fail to email, call, or text me each time his media interventions 
on behalf of the president ignite a PR storm—such as now. I guess it’s because I’ve stated 
many times here that he was my most influential journalism teacher.

Malam Garba is being severely roasted and chewed up by everyone—Buhari supporters 
and critics alike— for saying the president is working from home because “rodents have 
caused a lot of damage to the furniture and the air conditioning units” in his office.

One particularly saucy email I received on Wednesday said, “Someone as intelligent as 
the person you’ve portrayed in your columns shouldn’t tell a lie this dumb.” That’s a little 
too harsh, but I understand the sentiment that informed this angst.

There is no doubt that Malam Garba is one of Nigeria’s finest journalists and reputation 
managers. You need to know him in his pre-Buhari days to appreciate this.  Armed with 
a BA from Bayero University, Kano, and an MA from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, 
he rose through the ranks and became everything that anybody would ever want to become 
in Nigerian journalism.

He was Managing Director and Editor-in-Chief of a newspaper, president of the Nigerian Guild 
of Editors, an adjunct journalism instructor who trained generations of journalists and journalism 
professors in Nigeria and abroad, and so on. He also famously managed former Vice President 
Atiku Abubakar’s media relations with the polish, sophistication, and confident panache of a 
consummate, accomplished communicator.

So what happened? Why has his performance as spokesman of President Buhari been 
such a damp squib, as the British would put it?

Before I offer my opinion, I want to make it clear that, as a personal philosophy and in 
order not to compromise my independence, I usually keep my distance from friends and 
acquaintances who have been thrust into positions of political power. So I haven’t been in 
touch with Malam Garba since he became President Buhari’s spokesperson. I imagine that 
my disappointment with the Buhari administration, which is evidenced in my stinging 
censures of the government, must be a source of worry to him.

To his credit, the only times he ever communicated with me since becoming the president’s 
spokesman was, first, to acknowledge my congratulatory message to him and, second, 
to ask me to connect him with Dr. Bennet Omalu, the celebrated Nigerian-born American 
forensic pathologist, about whom I wrote in 

So this column is informed only by my intuition about what I think is going on. There are at l
east two reasons why current presidential media communication, overseen by Femi Adesina 
and Garba Shehu, has been remarkably subpar so far.

First, it’s obvious that both Adesina and Shehu don’t have a robust, direct access to the 
president. Directives don’t seem to always come directly from the president to his media aides. 
It’s usually, it would appear, from the president to a tortuous labyrinth of surrogates before it 
gets to the media team. Most of the times, it’s actually influential people connected—or 
thought to be connected—to the president who dictate what the presidential media team says 
to the public.

 I recall an incident in late 2015 that left me in no doubt that the president’s media team 
members don’t enjoy the respect usually accorded to presidential spokespeople. I was having an 
argument with someone close to 
the Buhari presidency over something, and he suddenly said, “I will tell the president’s media 
team to issue a statement to clarify this.” A few hours later, a statement was issued expressing 
the exact sentiments of my interlocutor who isn’t even officially a part of the government. 
That blew me away.

So, basically, the presidential spokespeople are mere errand boys of Buhari’s shadowy 
surrogates and a motley crowd of official, semi-official, and unofficial power brokers who pull 
the levers of power in the presidency.

No public relations person, however smart he might be, can function optimally in the kind of 
politically toxic and factious environment that the Buhari presidency exemplifies. 
Communication scholars teach their students that public relations is a “management function.” 
That’s why most American PR practitioners insist that they have untrammeled access to the 
CEO of any organization they are a part of. In the Buhari presidency, PR isn’t a 
“management function.”

When PR people have no direct, unhindered access to their principal and are left to divine 
the motives of their principal’s actions and inactions, you can’t avoid the kinds of irremediable 
PR cataclysms we’ve been witnessing these past two years. Recall how Femi Adesina exulted 
in giddy, child-like excitement when he received a call from President Buhari from London 
in February 2017. There is no clearer evidence of the vast disconnect between the president 
and his media team than that incident.

It’s clear that President Buhari has nothing but disdain for the Nigerian news media—and, 
of course, the Nigerian public—which is instantiated by the fact that he would rather speak 
to foreign media organizations than speak to Nigerian journalists. Even when he was healthy 
and vibrant, he had only one presidential media chat—the worst record since 1999.

So when the president’s spokespeople are pressured to explain his policies, they are often 
caught flat-footed, or forced to regurgitate the asinine, unprofessional prevarications of the 
dolts who surround the president. I won’t be surprised if the presidential rodent explanation 
was whispered to Malam Garba by some low-IQ presidential surrogate.

I say this because I know Garba Shehu. He is infinitely more intelligent than his current 
performance suggests. This is no instinctual defense of a former teacher by his adoring 
former student. Anyone who knows me would tell you I am not given to such fawning 
sentimentality.

The second reason Buhari’s media team is floundering is that the very foundation of the 
government it seeks project positively is wobbly at best. It is founded on lies and deceit, as 
I’ve pointed out here several times. There has been no more unprepared, disorganized, and 
duplicitous government in Nigeria’s recent memory than this. This fact changes everything. 
You can’t defend an edifice of lies with truth; the edifice would crumble and crush you. 
Lies attract more lies and require still more lies to sustain them.

A president who won’t lay bare what ails him, who won’t come clean on the tens of billions 
of naira of our national patrimony he is expending to take care of his health in a foreign land 
while thousands of people who voted him into office die of preventable diseases every day, 
who uses his health to blackmail the nation into tolerating and even celebrating his 
incompetence, and who evinces stone-cold disrespect for everyday people can’t be 
defended with anything other than fetid lies.

If I had a choice in the matter, I would have advised Malam Garba to resign to salvage 
what remains of his hard-earned reputation, but I also recognize that it’s easier said than done.

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