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| Daniel Bwala. |
In the last 24 hours, social media has exploded over my interview with Mehdi Hassan, albeit with varied opinions. Let me set the record straight.
When I
signed on to the privileged job granted to me by Mr. President, I was well
aware of its implications. Selling ice cream, looking fine, and seeking the
praises of men were never part of it. Some of the fiercest critics of my
interview can not even stand local TV anchors. But the task of promoting and
defending the President and his administration is what I do with ease and joy.
I am prepared to appear before any interviewer, anywhere in the world, any day
and at any time, to defend this government and its policies.
I have
never, and will never, subscribe to ducking or dodging interviews on matters
that concern promoting and defending the administration I was appointed to
serve. It is the least of what is required of me.
Head to Head
contacted me requesting an interview, stating that they wanted to challenge our
government on security, the economy, and corruption. Nowhere in our almost six
months of communication did they mention that they were going to challenge my
past. If that had been their plan, ethically and professionally, they were
supposed to inform me so I could prepare my response. But that’s okay,
ethically, that is on them, not on me.
I refused to
swallow the pill of Mehdi’s “opposition research-style journalism,” and even
today, if you carefully compare what he read as quotes from organisations and
groups, you will see that many were inaccurate and some were outright fake
news. But I will leave that for another day.
As for what
I said about President Tinubu in the past, I am glad those were things I said
when I was in the opposition saddle with such zeal. It is all politics. Half of
Donald Trump’s cabinet is made up of people who once spoke against him, and
quite a number of people in our own cabinet also spoke against President Tinubu
in the past. Those things do not bother him if you care to know.
The majority
of the naysayers are members of the opposition and their sympathisers. It does
not bother me one bit. Their temporary excitement over the interview has not
lasted and will not last, because it does not take away their obvious problem
of lack of vision, mission in conducting and managing a political party; yet
they seek to manage Nigeria. Clearly they have no path to victory and no
alternative policies or program for the Nigerian people. And if they say they
do, they can as well go to head to head and be interrogated on that; as the
saying in Hausa goes “Ga fili Ga doki”
I conclude
by thanking the many Nigerians and non-Nigerians who sent in their
commendations over my brave defence of our government in an interview where the
anchor would hardly let you answer a question unless it suited his narrative.
I still have
admiration and respect for Mehdi Hassan as arguably the best debater on the
planet. I look forward to part two of the Head to Head interview, and I am glad
that by then questions about my past will no longer be news so that we can
focus on our administration’s policies, programs and what we have achieved so
far.
D.H Bwala
Special
Adviser to President on Media and Policy Communication
(State
House).

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