By Dele Momodu
Fellow Nigerians, let me say categorically
that I’ve never seen a country where the citizens like to argue over every
miniscule issue like Nigeria. We are a country of absolutism. Every now and
then we just enjoy coming up with highfalutin theories out of the blues and
everyone begins to recycle and regurgitate the mantra. Once upon a time, TRUE
FEDERALISM was the swansong. Half, if not most, of those shouting the phrase
had little or no idea of what it meant. It seems we just love to hear the
cacophony of our own voices and prefer to join whatever is in season or in
vogue.
I vividly recollect how a SOVEREIGN NATIONAL
CONFERENCE became the only panacea for a united Nigeria after the satanic
annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidential election. If you asked the
exponents of that discordant idea how to activate and actualise such event,
they always drew a blank.
For example, who would represent each zone? How would
the representatives be selected to the general acceptance and acclaim of the people? How binding would the
deliberations and conclusions be on the generality of Nigerians? Would the
outcome replace our Constitution? If the Conference goes ahead and by
whatever stroke of luck or miracle Nigerians for once agree that the present
Presidential system is bunkum and we need to return to Regionalism and
Parliamentary system, how would the current beneficiaries like Governors,
Ministers, Commissioners, Senators, House of Reps members, Local Government
Chairmen, Councillors and a long retinue of political jobbers, agree to effect
this unpleasant decision that would render them impotent and ultimately
sack most of them?
Answers: BLANK!
The latest craze in Nigeria now is
RESTRUCTURING. Everywhere you turn, someone must tell you Nigeria needs to
restructure fast. Everyone, including those who have controlled power the
longest, is crying and lamenting, like the Biblical Jeremiah, that they’ve been
MARGINALISED. You begin to wonder what is wrong with us. The renewed agitation
for BIAFRA is borne out of that supposed persecution complex of the Igbo people
by, as always theoretically, the Hausa/Fulani oligarchy. Surprisingly, geography is not a
popular subject in Nigeria. Many of those tribal jingoists often lump the whole
of Northern Nigeria together as a monolithic entity. They studiously forget
that the North has its own majority/minority brouhaha. Indeed, there is not one
Igbo nation as the agitators may want us to believe.
The arguments of those seeking justice by
fire by force thus falls flat on closer examination because there is no one
North or one South, or one Igbo, One Yoruba, one Hausa. New and uglier problems
would instantly emerge as soon as we break Nigeria up into pieces. I’m
reasonably assured that fresh complaints of marginalisation would resume. In the
State of Osun, where I spent half of my present age, the people of Ile-Ife are
already grumbling aloud that no Ife son or daughter has ever been a Governor
even though Ile-Ife is the ancestral home of the Yoruba race. And that is the
tale and litany of woes everywhere. Whatever we see happening now is nothing
short of marriage of convenience.
Let’s get down to brass tacks and tackle
the matter of restructuring. The word itself suggests that there is something
faulty about the present structure and configuration of Nigeria. That has never
been in doubt. However, the problem in my view is largely political and less
economic in nature. Those who have controlled Nigeria politically in the last
57 years have shown no capacity to exploit their humongous power to the overall
benefit of their people. All they’ve succeeded in doing is empower a few of
their cronies who become demigods during their reign. Most end up frittering
the loot they make away with like prodigal sons and soon return to irrelevance
and infamy.
I’ve asked many of those saying they feel cheated in
Nigeria to explain what they mean and I’ve concluded from their answers that it
is more of politics than anything else. None could answer me when I asked why a
strong and highly educated Dr Alex Ekwueme could not do much as Vice President
under President Shehu Shagari from 1979 to 1983? I asked a similar question of
why at least five Igbos were Senate Presidents, one Deputy Senate President,
one Deputy Speaker and none has been able to seek and cede more power to the
Igbo people in the last 18 years? If the Igbos argue that they want the
Presidency as a matter of legitimate right, then the answer is they must keep
working like others. The example of Chief Moshood Abiola has demonstrated
clearly that for anyone to win the race, he must build consensus everywhere. He
showed that it is a game of mathematical numbers and it is never a gift to
anyone. Out of the old six regions in Nigeria, a Presidential candidate must
lock down about four to realise his dream. The point is that you should never
become Nigeria’s leader simply by virtue of where you come from but by what you
have to offer in nation building. Rotation and zoning are largely responsible
for proliferation of poor and preposterous leadership in Nigeria.
Let’s highlight some permutations. Had the
Igbos worked well with the South West and the North Central, it might have been
easier for an Igbo Presidency to materialise. Just imagine if they could lock
down the entire South where majority are Christians and the Southern Muslims
even marry Christians, the next job would be to align with the so-called minorities
scattered across the Northern belts. I’m certain many of our youths are unaware
that Chief Obafemi Awolowo once performed such experiment when he chose an Igbo
man, Phillip Umeadi, as his running mate. He would probably have succeeded if
he had secured massive votes from the South East and South South. All he would
have needed was to poach from mostly North East and North Central. Alas, the audacious
experiment failed woefully. Since then no Southern candidate of note has ever
dared to pick a running mate from the South.
There is an enduring lesson to learn from
the people of South West Nigeria. In 1981, Chief Moshood Abiola was frustrated
out of a political party in which he invested so much time, energy and
resources, the National Party of Nigeria (NPN). He went back home quietly to
lick his wounds. He had enough cash to try and destabilise the polity at the
time but he opted to up his philanthropic work. He reached out to every nook
and cranny of Nigeria helping the needy, contributing to schools, churches,
mosques, creating jobs, investing in agriculture, sports and so
on. From being one of the most hated Nigerians, he became one of the most
loved. It was only a matter of time before his chickens came home to roost. By
the time he launched his Presidential bid in 1993, even his most vociferous
critics knew he was unstoppable. Chief Abiola won the election, but lost the
mandate freely given to him by every part of Nigeria. The Nigerian Mafia,
connived and conspired to rob him of his hard-fought victory. Every effort to
regain his mandate was rebuffed and frustrated. The strategy was simple and effective. Reduce Abiola’s
victory to a Yoruba affair, repeat all kinds of lies till they become
believable, and a pan-Nigerian mandate was burnt into ashes. Abiola was
abandoned and left in the lurch. Still the Yoruba people did not seek revenge
or retaliation. They fought and without firing a shot extracted a form of
justice as payback. The destroyers of June 12 could not believe the resilience
of the people. In frustration and desperation, they sought and found a perfect
ally to dump the stolen mandate on since they didn’t want Abiola by all means.
General Olusegun Obasanjo served this purpose and it was a coronation of sorts
when he reincarnated as civilian President.
It is important to note that the people of
the South West were not over-excited about the re-emergence of Obasanjo. As a
matter of fact, they became his most ardent opponents. In anger, Obasanjo
turned his war against Yoruba leaders like Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Lagos
State was deprived of its statutory allocations, even after the Supreme Court
ruled in its favour. Interestingly, the current Acting President, Professor
Yemi Osinbajo, was the Lagos State Attorney General that fought spiritedly
against the Federal Government at the time. The lesson I wish to draw from this
is that, sometimes, it is better, and safer, to fight a battle of wits than a
duel of brawn. The use of force can never guarantee a meaningful victorious
end.
Another example is Dr Goodluck Jonathan’s
emergence as President of Nigeria. When President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua’s cabal
was going to stop him from acting as President in the face of obvious
incapacitation of the President, some Yoruba leaders, including Professor Wole
Soyinka, Lt. General Alani Akinrinade, Bola Tinubu, Pastor Tunde Bakare, Femi
Falana, mobilised other Nigerians to fight for the Nigerian Constitution to be
respected. Afterwards, it would have been tougher for Jonathan to defeat
Muhammadu Buhari in 2011 but for the superlative support he got from the South
West.
The same Yoruba people may have felt
marginalised under Jonathan but only retaliated with their votes in 2015. This
principle should be borrowed and adopted by other tribes of Nigeria. Your
greatest weapon is your vote and not how many guns you can acquire and fire.
The calculated support for Buhari paid up handsomely when Osinbajo became the
Vice President of Nigeria. Osinbajo is Acting President today because of the
principle laid and nurtured by the Yoruba in 2010 when they supported an
Ijawman as Acting President. It has become almost impossible for anyone to go
against our Constitution. The Igbos enjoyed no special infrastructure
privileges under Jonathan but had a quasi-Prime Minister in Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.
They threw their full weight behind him in 2015. Unfortunately, Jonathan was
sacked from power.
Let’s now fast forward. Nigeria is in big
trouble. Suddenly, everyone is talking blah blah blah and crying wolf where
there is none. The virulent, violent agitators will not consider dialogue or
compromise. They are fixated about breaking away from Nigeria. All well and
good. The liberals feel that is not the way to go. They want Nigeria
restructured fast and now. I support the latter and I have two fundamental
suggestions to make…
The Presidential system we miscopied from
America has become too convoluted and expensive. Nigeria can no longer sustain
36 States plus Abuja and the attendant political operatives. Any call for the
creation of more States is therefore reckless and irresponsible. I know it is
impracticable to collapse some of the existing States and return to the six
Regions or 12 states but this must be considered. The resources of Nigeria are
being carelessly wasted on less than five percent of the population. If we
truly love ourselves, we must bury our foolish pride and do the needful.
The principle of federal character was
adopted to give every part of Nigeria a sense of belonging. The born to rule
mentality of some people must be discouraged and curtailed immediately. Such
puerile and nauseating statements credited to some Arewa youths that they
donated power to Abiola, and later to Obasanjo, should be totally disregarded,
dismissed and kept where it rightly belongs, the dustbin.
Democracy is a game of numbers and
whosoever can mobilise enough Nigerians is the leader. The principle of
rotation is unconstitutional. It is left to the political parties to accept or
not. Any Nigerian is free to contest his popularity at the polls and should
never be threatened into abandoning his dreams. That is why Nigeria is not a
one-party state. Anyone who threatens the peace of Nigeria should be sanctioned
and disciplined. A powerful Sultan Dasuki was dethroned and banished from
Sokoto for whatever reasons. His son, Sambo, a once powerful National Security
Adviser, has since been in indefinite detention, under whatever guise. A
popular Shiite leader has been incarcerated without trial all this while. Why
should some pseudo-cultural leaders feel they are above the law and that they
can insult fellow citizens to the bargain? Enough of that crap. The law should
take its course within the confines of the Constitution.
The Buhari government should declare a
state of Emergency on Education. The reason our youths are easily brainwashed
is because of the preponderance of ignorance and poverty in our country. The
comments spewing out of some people are just too jejune and disgraceful at this
time and age. Educational pre-requisites should be brought to par in all
States. Never again should we breed sub-standard students under the guise of
educationally disadvantaged zones. Education is education and those who cannot
meet the requirements should stay longer in classes to catch up on their
studies. I wrote my WAEC exams thrice in 1976, 1977 and 1978 before I made my
credits. No one should be admitted into a university if they can’t meet the
cut-off marks. We’ve damaged our education almost irreparably by condoning
mediocrity in the past. Our myopic and sectional leaders obviously did not know
they were sowing seeds of backwardness (or did so deliberately to clone a
nation of morons) and the result is the bountiful harvest of mass illiteracy
and dangerous brigandage we have in our hands today…
God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Credit:
Dele Momodu, Thisday
No comments:
Post a Comment