Category: Idowu Akinlotan

  • NBA’s ‘rogues and vultures’

    NBA’s ‘rogues and vultures’

    NIGERIANS want anyone who is chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to be combative, aggressive, urgent and unrelenting. This is why they took to Nuhu Ribadu, a former chairman of the commission, and are indulging Ibrahim Magu, the current chairman, despite his many foibles and lack of policy and ideational robustness. Mallam Ribadu is a lawyer and seemed, regardless of his customary impatience, to put on flimsy acts that were a reluctant sop to the rule of law. Mr Magu is so angry with everything that he is not aware he exudes messianic airs, not to talk of alarmingly seeming to have even outgrown the constitution of the republic. A few days ago, he angrily reacted to calls for the separation of the EFCC’s investigative and prosecutorial powers, describing the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) as ‘populated by rogues and vultures’. It mattered little to him that it was the new president of the association who made the suggestion, not even the NBA.

    Abubakar Mahmoud was on August 26 in Port Harcourt inaugurated as president of the NBA. In his inaugural speech, he called for the EFCC to be, as it were, unbundled to enable it focus more appropriately on the onerous job of investigating financial crimes and other acts of corruption. As Mr Magu sneeringly said, Mr Mahmoud was not the first to make that call. Here is what the NBA president said that inexplicably goaded the anti-graft czar into a fit: “The Nigerian Bar Association commits itself to the fight against corruption in Nigeria. We will put our knowledge, our skills and all resources to combat corruption and reclaim the dignity of Nigerians and of our country. We recognize however that the fight against corruption can only be achieved if we do so within the framework of the rule of law and by strong institutions. The critical institutions involved must be repositioned and reequipped and retooled to confront the problem of corruption on a consistent sustainable basis.”

    He goes on to suggest: “As a start, we commend the efforts of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission for the work it is doing and for its modest achievements. However, going forward the NBA must demand the reform of the institution itself. We need to define its mandate more narrowly and more clearly. In my view its broad operations as an investigative and prosecutorial agency should be reviewed. I recommend strongly that the EFCC be limited to investigation. The decision to prosecute and the conduct of the prosecution must be by an independent highly resourced prosecution agency. In addition, the EFCC and the prosecution agency must be secured from political interference in their activities. There is absolutely no reason for it to report operationally or otherwise to the Presidency.”

    Miffed by Mr Mahmoud’s suggestion, which apparently the EFCC boss sees as unbearable effrontery, Mr Magu left the substance of the NBA president’s argument and launched into what he believed motivated the call for the unbundling of the EFCC. Said the EFCC chairman in a statement signed by the commission’s spokesman: “The commission views with concern the call by the NBA president that the EFCC be stripped of its prosecutorial powers. According to him (NBA president), ‘we need to define its mandate more narrowly and more clearly… I strongly recommend that the EFCC be limited to investigation… while prosecution should be handled by an independent resource prosecution agency’. The commission’s discomfort over this seeming innocuous proposition stems from the fact that Mahmoud was silent on the reason for his position…More importantly, the commission cannot comprehend how the redefinition of EFCC’s mandate in narrow terms, ultimately whittling it down, fits into the clamour by Nigerians and the vision of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration for a vibrant and courageous anti-corruption agency.”

    Not yet done fishing for motives instead of responding adequately to the NBA president’s argument, the EFCC continues: “Instead, Mahmoud’s suggestion appears perfectly in sync with a cleverly disguised campaign by powerful forces that are uncomfortable with the reinvigorated anti-graft campaign of the EFCC and are hell-bent on emasculating the agency by stripping it of powers to prosecute with the tame excuse that an agency that investigates cannot also prosecute. The question Nigerians must ask the Mahmoud-led NBA is what is wrong with EFCC prosecution? Mahmoud is in a position to answer this question. He was the federal attorney-general’s counsel in the trial of ex-Delta State governor, James Ibori, at the Federal High Court, Asaba, a case which EFCC lost in questionable circumstances. But the same ingredients from that case were used to fetch Ibori a 13-year jail term in London. Mahmoud is also the commission’s counsel in the appeal against the infamous perpetual injunction from arrest and prosecution by former Rivers State Governor, Peter Odili, which is still pending before the Court of Appeal in Port Harcourt, many years after it was filed.”

    Finally, the EFCC statement gave its verdict: One, that, “A Bar populated or directed by people perceived to be rogues and vultures cannot play the role of priests in the temple of justice.” And two, that, “It is too much of a strange coincidence that the suggestion to strip the EFCC of its prosecutorial powers is being floated a few months after the commission, in unprecedented fashion, arraigned some senior lawyers for corruption…Against this background, the campaign appears to be self-serving, intended to create a cabal of untouchables that can be investigated but may never be prosecuted.” It was a clever ploy by the EFCC to appeal to public emotions over the controversy when the commission itself had not addressed the substance of the NBA president’s arguments. Mr Mahmoud has responded again to the EFCC umbrage by debunking some of the planks of the anti-graft agency’s accusations, including his alleged involvement in the ex-governor James Ibori case. Let the NBA and the EFCC and other interested persons slug it out, as indeed they are already doing bad-temperedly on social media and newspaper pages. This column is interested in something else.

    The EFCC has a right to protect and advance the laws that empower its operations. Indeed, they have a right to seek to expand those powers in order to make their operations more efficient. If the public have reservations about those powers or fail to appreciate the need for the operations of the agency to be strengthened, its officers and leaders have the right to go all out to argue their case, find eloquent protagonists and deploy them accordingly. Many times in the past, the EFCC had exploited these options and had presented its case before the public, sometimes successfully, but sometimes unsuccessfully. But it is arrogant and illogical of the EFCC to seek to take away the right of those who think the EFCC is not set up in such a manner as to be efficient, or who, like the NBA president, think the EFCC can be reformed to make it more operationally efficient.

    This column has read Mr Mahmoud’s inaugural speech and can find nothing in it that indicates preconceived or virulent hostility to the EFCC. Perhaps Mr Magu has the gift of psychoanalysing his critics, and can detect traitors to the national cause from 1000km away. Even then, as far as the EFCC’s peevish response to the NBA president’s suggestion goes, it was nothing but a dangerous assignment of motives, a cocktail of messianic propaganda, and a clumsy attempt to take refuge in mass hysteria and executive deification. This is precisely one of the things the NBA appeared to be worried about. Under Mallam Ribadu, and now under Mr Magu, the EFCC has joyfully but unhealthily attached itself to the apron strings of a deified executive. Mallam Ribadu groveled before ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo; Mr Magu stands and works in brazen awe of President Buhari. This is both unhealthy and indefensible.

    It is not clear whether the NBA president’s argument is the best or even the wisest. But the paranoia, blackmail and abuse the EFCC appears to embrace and idolise are also unhelpful and demeaning. The NBA president has triggered a debate about whether to unbundle the EFCC or not. It is a debate that can be engaged in by everyone sensibly, coherently and patriotically. It is disgusting to think the constitution guarantees freedom of speech and expression but the EFCC bosses who have outgrown the country’s grundnorm must take away those rights by recklessly assigning and ascribing malicious motives to dissenters. This columnist has, for instance, not made up his mind whether to support the EFCC status quo or to back the option of unbundling. It is important that whichever way he votes must not be twisted and misconstrued by a bunch of intolerant and spiteful public officers who have private contempt for the constitution.

    Undoubtedly, the problems of corruption, insecurity and other evils are rather huge and unsettling, even threatening the peace and stability of the republic. But how the country approaches and tackles these problems will determine what the future will look like. It is often said that black people have no significant sense of the day after tomorrow, with the here and now being more important to them. Nigeria must begin to put the lie to that stereotype by organising its affairs more scientifically, restrainedly and futuristically. A sense of the importance of the here and now must never be allowed to jeopardise a sense of tomorrow and the day after.

    The Buhari presidency has not given his sceptics confidence that he thinks through his responses to the challenges facing the country. It is time he reordered things while still staying faithful and firm to the values he has sought to bring to governance. The EFCC has sometimes acted messianically; the Department of State Service (DSS) has sometimes given the impression the rule of law is an inconvenience; and until recently, the military had to be compelled to fight insurgency in the Northeast with the forceful decorum of a great military. But whether the EFCC, DSS or even the military, none of them has acted consistently with genuine passion and respect for the rule of law. Nor, as it is also obvious, has the presidency itself, especially in the case of the Shiites.

    In fact, if critics had not consistently belaboured the Buhari presidency in those giddy early days of his government, when he was riding roughshod over the judiciary and the rule of law, Nigeria would have become like the Philippines of President Rodrigo Duterte whose maniacal approach to fighting societal ills, not to talk of his bizarre and indulgent view of rape and his own prurient, dark instincts, has led to the extrajudicial killing of thousands of Filipino, some of them innocent, and the unwholesome desecration of the media, justice system, military and police establishments. This often happens when emotions, rather than rationality, rule, and when aggressive people of inferior minds, as the Philippines shows, preside over their betters. It is time public agencies began to operate strictly along constitutional lines. There is no alternative. If they will not, the public must eschew emotionalism to put pressure on them to observe the rule of law.

    This column had, a few weeks ago, asked for Mr Magu to be confirmed by the Senate, but with a caveat that he must be restrained from his impetuous habit of sniveling at the constitution. Given his intemperate reaction to the NBA president’s argument over EFCC powers, it is now all the more important that the anti-graft czar must be grilled closely by the Senate before he is given the green light. He must hope for his own sake and career that skipping over the vetting hurdles is not beyond his intellectual agility, and that his now famous passion for work can find some redemptive value in a system that excuses undisciplined evasion of rules. The discomfiting irony, however, is that the legislature itself is not a model of financial and moral rectitude; yet it must screen and vet others. Nor, unhappily, are the executive and the judiciary above suspicion. The herculean task before Nigerians is that they need to recognise that salvaging their country must never be surrendered to tin-pot messiahs, closet religious fanatics many of whom populate government houses, and intolerant and abusive careerists in ministries and agencies. It is a collective job requiring vigilance, introspection and deep and suave application of intellect.

  • Fr. Mbaka’s religious  and political amalgam

    Fr. Mbaka’s religious and political amalgam

    CATHOLIC priest and founder of the Enugu-based Adoration Ministry, Ejike Mbaka, has remained undaunted in his fiery engagements with people of power despite the dreadful unease he causes the Catholic Church. His latest outburst suggesting that plans were being hatched by some shadowy persons to assassinate President Muhammadu Buhari is certain to bring grief to his superiors in the church. A few days ago while ministering, Fr. Mbaka had declared that opponents of President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti-corruption war were determined to bring the campaign to a halt by getting rid of the president. He gave no substantiation other than to say heaven revealed the plot to him.
    Hear the outspoken priest: “So I want to tell you that so far, God is happy with Buhari. And him whom God has blessed, may you not try to curse, because God will curse you…Many people are planning, as it is revealed, to kill him. There are many plans on how to eliminate him so that corruption will continue, so that quantum embezzlement will continue…But the Lord says ‘God who put you there will not forsake you. Be firm, be resolute, remain focused, and be unbiased. Refuse to be intimidated and refuse to be distracted. Go ahead and war against evil. President Buhari, go ahead and war against corruption. President Buhari, God and his people are behind you, you are the answer to the prayers of the people. Amen.’”
    It is not clear where God’s word stopped, and where that of Fr. Mbaka began. But the priest’s fulsome support for President Buhari predates last year’s presidential election. Happily for the priest, his love for Buhari has been amply requited. Last December, many months after assuming office, President Buhari hosted the priest in Aso Villa and eulogised his courage and faithfulness in ministry. The priest beamed. But an evidently distressed and alarmed Catholic Church thereafter transferred him to Emene, a suburb of Enugu, having stayed more than a decade at Christ the King Parish, GRA, Enugu. His new place of posting, Our Lady Parish, is much smaller. Fr. Ejike immediately concluded that his transfer was punitive because he spoke the truth to power and denied former president Goodluck Jonathan, a Christian, support. He added very colourfully and even poetically that given the smallness of the Emene parish, it was apparent he was destined to suffer, without a place to lay his head or place the assets of the Adoration Ministry which he founded and nurtured to host thousands of Catholic faithful regularly.
    Since he repudiated Dr Jonathan in January 2015 by calling on the electorate to reject the then president and instead embrace Gen Buhari, Fr. Mbaka has sustained his love, admiration and support for President Buhari, a support that has intensified and become amplified since the presidential election of 2015. Indeed, the priest argues passionately that President Buhari is the answer to the people’s and Catholic Church’s prayers concerning the election of a leader who would fight corruption. It was not surprising that this kind of unalloyed support would elicit equal adulation from the president who last July congratulated the priest on his 21 years in ministry and 10 years of the Adoration Ministry.
    However, increasingly, many Christians are becoming a little wary of both Fr. Mbaka’s fulsome praise of President Buhari and his fulminations against the president’s enemies and everyone who shows any reservations about his style. In fact, the Catholic Church appears greatly saddened by what they see as Fr. Mbaka’s politicisation of religion. His transfer to Our Lady Parish, they suggested last February through their spokesman, Rev. Fr. Ralph Madu, was routine, overdue and definitely not punitive. Priests, the spokesman continues, are meant to serve anywhere without grumbling and with humility, while posting of church functionaries has always remained the exclusive preserve of the bishop. Fr. Mbaka, he adds, had indeed overstayed at Christ the King Parish. His new posting, the spokesman concludes, should even give him time for his Adoration Ministry which is a private, not church, ministry.
    Neither Fr. Mbaka nor his supporters, who are in their thousands, nor yet his financiers, one of whom announced a N100m donation to the Adoration Ministry a few days ago, are persuaded that the transfer was routine. They encourage him to stand strong and defiant, and ask him to continue what they describe as his prophetic ministry. Fr. Mbaka himself has revelled in predicting things and is determined to give his followers and converts many of the spiritual offerings they have come to depend on and expect. He knows he has caused a lot of distress to the church and his superiors in particular, but he sees his loyalty to God as priority, and to his supervisors only secondarily. In the foreseeable future, he will, therefore, sustain his outspokenness, keep the tap flowing on his prophetic offering, and exercise defiance whenever the occasion demands it.
    While his supervisors eye him warily and squirm as he jauntily darts crosses the boundaries between prophetic ministry and political ministry, they will be even more at a loss what to do with him. To keep him is becoming to them an almost sheer impossibility; but to dispense with him entirely, assuming church rules make it expedient and easy, is even more challenging. Should they hope he would make an ass of himself one day with a spectacularly misplaced prophecy, they would still worry that the collateral damage to the church could be unbearable. When mega churches such as the Catholic Church deal with an unorthodox and possibly obstreperous priest, they find themselves caught between the rock and a hard place. They will of course recall with anguish the famous case of Martin Luther, the German-born Christian reformer. They will also not be unmindful of the fact that Fr. Mbaka seems to retain a lot of respect in and out of the Catholic Church.
    That respect may, however, begin to fade soon as Fr. Mbaka haughtily transcends the divide between religion and politics. He has belaboured Igbo irredentists in terms that are unexampled and unflattering, even describing them as evil and illogical. The various irredentist groups in the Southeast have responded in kind, advising him to drop his cassock and play full-time politics if he has the courage and the conviction. The more he abandons federal politics, which he fulminated against so popularly and effectively under Dr Jonathan, for local politics, a strange and unfamiliar ground to him, he could get ensnared. Even heavyweight Igbo politicians have been careful not to directly and irreverently oppose either the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) or the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB). Fr. Mbaka has shown no such sensitivity or even discipline.
    More, the priest could soon get into trouble with the wider public as he starts to allude to factors and sentiments that are either illusory or indefensible. Fr. Mbaka got away with murder, so to speak, when he assailed a deeply unpopular Dr Jonathan in the run-up to the last general elections. It is not clear that his fawning sentiments about President Buhari will continue to resonate as clearly and richly as he hopes and presumes. Will he recant sometime soon when that epiphany hits him? In March last year when he alleged that the Goodluck Jonathan family was after his life, the former president and his wife simply hissed and moved on. The First Family recalled that he had fawned over them in their early days in office, almost as if he was after certain patronage, according to their surmise. So when he began to rail against them, they first tried to blackmail him by releasing video recordings of how he praised the First Family. When that failed to unnerve the faithful who thronged his ministry grounds, the president and his wife simply ignored him.
    Fr. Mbaka will be sensible an sensitive enough to know he cannot play ducks and drakes with the affections of the mercurial President Buhari. The president has a reputation for not taking prisoners; but in addition, he has enough agencies and aides who do not balk at using state power in seemingly transparent manner to disembowel any upstart or critic, no matter how highly placed, or of whatever colour or religion. Fr. Mbaka is sucking up to the Buhari presidency now. He had better stand pat, for if the Nigerian cultural standard is anything to go by, he may be incapable of living or ministering above suspicion to escape the arm-twisting the Buhari government is becoming famous for.
    But above all, the Catholic Church cannot because of the fear of consequences continue to indulge Fr. Mbaka’s crass politicking. They should rein in their priest as they know how best to do in line with experience garnered from centuries of interaction with difficult political situations and upheavals. Priests have a voice in any social and political environment, especially as the Catholic Church knows in terms of the so-called liberation theology. And they can express those opinions brilliantly and within the context of the scriptures. But open and unadulterated partisanship is another thing entirely. If Fr. Mbaka will not caution himself, and the state is too intoxicated by his panegyrics to ask him who is planning to assassinate the president, the church should step in and do what is necessary to restore normality and decency.

  • History and the Ganduje/Kwankwasiyya battles

    History and the Ganduje/Kwankwasiyya battles

    NEARLY one year of simmering conflict between Kano State governor, Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, and his mentor, ex-governor and serving senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, has rubbished a proud history of mentorship and cooperation in the often volatile political terrain of Kano State. It is not unprecedented, but it is still shocking. Last week, the disagreement took a turn for the worse when policemen sealed the guest house headquarters of the Kwankwasiyya movement, a project designed to reinforce the politics and ideas of the former governor. Though a petition has been forwarded to the Police Service Commission to investigate why the police should ‘unconstitutionally’ abridge the rights of a people, the police authorities in the state said they were reacting to an ‘intelligence report that a mass wedding was to be held at the Kwankwaso-owned venue.’
    There are a myriad of reasons the two leading Kano politicians fell out, ranging from the post-Kwankwaso era composition of the state cabinet, image/influence supremacy battles, federal cabinet and board appointments, and even to the reckless and imposing behaviour of the supporters of both politicians, among many serious others. There will always be reasons to fall out between two powerful politicians. But few expect the nature and severity of the recent conflict. For eight years, the two had a great working relationship, first as governor and deputy between 1999 and 2003, and again between 2011 and 2015. Such friendship and loyalty are not forged on superficial bonds. But whether the damage can be repaired or not is the great question the Kanawa will struggle within the context of their radical and volatile politics to answer in the years ahead, especially shortly before and during the next elections.
    Political conflicts of the Ganduje/Kwankwaso texture are not a rarity in Kano, nor even elsewhere in Nigeria. The brilliant and charismatic Abubakar Rimi fell out with the iconic Aminu Kano, with telling and seismic consequences both for the two politicians and for the state’s economic development, and also for the cause of Nigerian progressivism. If Governor Ganduje and Senator Kwankwaso fail to reach a peace agreement, the naturally radical Kano electorate will ventilate their disagreements in ways that are difficult to predict or harness. The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) has been unable to broker peace, for whether at state or national level, the party itself is too locked in fierce structural and ideological battles to be a credible and effective agent of peace. Of all the 36 states, Kano State comes closest to the classical definition of a civic culture. So without peace in the ruling party, the consequences may be electorally unpredictable, as the state’s very interesting recent history has shown.
    However, the malaise gnawing at the politics of Kano has precedence elsewhere, especially during the Second Republic. Even more than Enugu State in the Fourth Republic, the old Anambra State in the Second Republic seemed to be the archetype of political discord. In Enugu State, ex-governor Jim Nwobodo virtually enthroned Chimaroke Nnamani in 1999, but the former was chased out of the state by the latter. And when Dr Nnamani also installed Sullivan Chime in 2007, the latter also fed the former to the sharks. But the story of the old Anambra State archetype is a little different. There, two gladiators battled for the soul and body of the state. Chief Nwobodo, the man with a thousand political battle scars, constituted the so-called Jim Vanguard to entrench and sustain his hegemony against federal invaders, first and more tamely led by Vice President Alex Ekwueme, and then second and more fiercely led by the Nkemba Front inspired by Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu who was drafted from exile by the Shehu Shagari National Party of Nigeria (NPN) government to give battle to the Jim Vanguard. The Nkpor Junction confrontation between the two armed organisations that led to the loss of many lives bore testimony to the fierceness of the struggle in those days.
    If reason prevails in Kano, and law enforcement agencies can find the good grace, humour and professionalism to resist the temptation to take sides so brazenly as they appeared to have done last week, perhaps, eventually the friends of Dr Ganduje and Senator Kwankwaso, not to say the sometimes dithering party itself, may be able to find a formula for peace in the state. What may no longer be realistic is restoring the two Kano politicians to the state of amity and cooperation they enjoyed up till 2015. Let them eye each other warily if they must, but by all means let them keep the peace no matter how gingerly.

  • Babangida at 75

    Babangida at 75

    EVENTS leading to ex-military president Ibrahim Babangida’s 75th birthday were not as controversial as his 70th. Since 2011, his annual interviews preceding his birthday celebrations have become much tamer, less pungent, but still idiosyncratically diversionary and superficial. Five years in the life of a septuagenarian can sometimes prove fatal and apparently significant enough to alter moods and moderate temper, even if every other superficiality is left untouched. Five years ago, IBB, as the former military dictator is fondly called, bad-temperedly joined issues with former president Olusegun Obasanjo, a truculent former military dictator and all-knowing elected president. “In my eight years in office,” began IBB testily, perhaps provoked by certain undisclosed actions or statements of Chief Obasanjo, “I was able to manage poverty and achieve success while somebody for eight years managed affluence and achieved failure.” The victim of that vicious broadside knew the cap fit, and not being one to shy away from battle, gave a swift and fierce riposte.
    Hiding behind scriptures in his usual engaging but self-serving manner, Chief Obasanjo bellowed: “Well, normally when I read these things I don’t believe them. Yesterday when somebody phoned me and said this was said, I said I don’t believe it. He said check on all the papers and I said get me all the papers; they got me the papers and I read; it’s a little bit unlike Babangida. But if Babangida had decided that on becoming a septuagenarian he would be a fool, I think one should probably do what the Bible says in Proverbs chapter 26, verse 4. It says, don’t answer a fool because you may also become like him.” Chief Obasanjo immersed himself in more scriptural verses, flirted briefly with his own rhetorical gifts, and finally dismissed IBB on the gallows where fools at 40 are figuratively hung. Disinclined to leaving Chief Obasanjo with the last word, IBB described his former commander as a witless comedian.
    IBB’s 75th birthday interview is considerably less provocative. There is little in it that is profound or captivating. Other than his controversial attempt to repudiate the word ‘evil’ from his nom de guerre, the sobriquet most Nigerians have attached to him since Tell magazine editors interviewed him during the Sani Abacha regime, there was little else. Indeed, with every passing year, IBB has become less controversial and less engaging. In 2012, before his 71 birthday, he had reiterated to his interviewers: “I was asked a question by Tell magazine. They said people call you all sorts of names, ranging from Maradona, a deft dribbler and all those. They asked which one of the names I preferred and I said evil genius. They asked why? And I said because of its contradiction.” He was the originator of that label, not Tell magazine, nor any interviewer. It suited him because it was a contradiction, he had said. But it is probably because it sounded poetic to him and gave an energetic insight into the secret and interwoven world of his Machiavellian convictions.
    The famous Tell interview is arguably the longest he has ever given. In it, he prevaricated profusely as usual and parried quite a number of questions. But partly because of its length and the mastery exhibited by the editors who interviewed him, his leadership incapacitation showed forth brightly and brilliantly. He was not profound in the interview; he is still not profound, and indeed is no longer expected to be, on account of his age. He shirked and excused his responsibility to himself and the nation, and displayed such atrocious lack of judgement that should see him hauled before a court martial had he served in a great imperial and perhaps ideological military. He continues to defend his decisions as a military head of state, and shows none of the reflection age and wisdom sometimes confer on a leader from hindsight. Till he breathes his last, there will obviously be no remorse from him on anything or any policy, except very rudimentary and inconsequential ones such as the question on whether legislators should be part time or full time.
    In the interview to mark his 75th birthday, a grand old age by any consideration, he suggested there was nothing evil about him or the administration he presided over. He said nothing about the genius part. Well, everyone is entitled to a little self-indulgence and afterthought. So, without saying it, IBB would have his audience regard him as a genius. But genius of what? Of the Machiavellian politics he fawned over and for decades continued to adumbrate at every forum he was invited to? Of the mindless policy fecundity that hallmarked his administration for eight years or so? Or of his limitless ability to pawn his generosity in the service of his private goals and image embellishment, and to the disservice of national goals, principles and values? Whatever it is, like the sage Obafemi Awolowo, IBB was for a long time a recurring decimal in Nigerian politics and governance. Many of his marks are indelible, especially in view of his policy experimentations that saw Nigeria overwhelmed with new agencies and parastatals, but the passage of time, not to talk of shifting global and national mores, will continue to corrode and diminish his influence.
    When a bitter and offended Chief Obasanjo responded to IBB’s virtually unprovoked putdown on the Obasanjo years, it was to launch into a lengthy defence of his two terms in office, and of his incomparable projects and programmes. But programme for programme, and policy for policy, IBB probably had a more salutary and enduring impact on national affairs than Chief Obasanjo. IBB was a more rounded personality quite able to endure animosity without descending into the fierce vindictiveness that undermined and scarify the Obasanjo persona. Somehow, too, he managed to sustain some eternally tentative balance between his Machiavellian predilections, complete with human rights abuses, and his copious friendliness and determination to mentor others, particularly younger people. He loved to leave an impact on those whose paths crossed his, though it is not clear whether, as some say, it was to subvert their principles, or out of altruism to leave them indebted to him. In the department of humanism, neither Chief Obasanjo nor anyone who has governed Nigeria since IBB vacated office can hold the candle to him, not even President Muhammadu Buhari.
    As his many interviews show, IBB is no genius. The very many programmes and policies he undertook were the products of other people’s fertile imagination. This partly explains their lack of coherence. In none of his interviews did he intellectually engage those who asked him for answers. He didn’t even have the foresight to recognise the victory that June 12, 1993 presidential election meant to him and his legacy. That election was a lifetime opportunity to lay the foundation for burying the religious and ethnic divides that had truncated Nigeria’s peace and stability. It was also an opportunity to remould democracy in a way that fairly guarantees continental greatness. But he spurned the chance and denounced his own best efforts. Now he talks frequently of the country’s virtual two-party system, as if it was a conscious and deliberate bequest from him; but the idea, as everyone knows, was not original to him. It was borrowed.
    And so, whether it is IBB, or the late Gen Abacha, or Gen Abdulsalami Abubakar, or Chief Obasanjo, or President Buhari, what unites them is excess of ambition. Many years back, IBB promised his memoirs. Hopefully it will be published in his lifetime, not posthumously, so that commentators and living witnesses can join issues with him. From all indications, however, even if this magnum opus is published, there will be no remorse in it, possibly also no reflections since he does not appear capable of the analytical depth needed to produce them, and no grand ideas of nationhood in the ambitious, pan-Africanist sense. He may not even demonstrate the courage needed to reveal the conspirators that subverted democracy in 1993. For far beyond his grandstanding and the quelling of the 1990 Gideon Orkar coup, he is at bottom not really a courageous man. If he publishes at all, it will be to burnish the image of his regime and make a case for the many fruitless experiments his regime undertook. It will also be about underscoring his capacity to make friends across all divides, about how he sustains the friendships he is noted for, and about why his political and economic programmes are to him, with a little modification, the best.
    IBB does not have the vigour anymore to influence public policy in the manner Chief Obasanjo still annoyingly does. But he has kept his friends and nurtured them far better than any past or living president. In death, notwithstanding his many appalling failings, he will draw more mourners than his peers can ever hope to attract. That should be his private consolation in the midst of the grief and gloom he and all Nigerian leaders since independence have caused a country much worthier than their capacity to give.

  • Can Supreme Court disentangle Kogi paradox?

    Can Supreme Court disentangle Kogi paradox?

    WHEN the Appeal Court returned judgement unanimously in favour of Governor Yahaya Bello on August 4, there was no rejoicing anywhere in Kogi State except inside the State House in Lokoja. In less than six months since the governor assumed office, Kogites had become thoroughly disenchanted with and exhausted by the governor’s immature and predatory approach to governance. Petitions are being written against his financial management style, workers are downcast and dejected, and the people are horrified to imagine that Mr Bello could by some legal artifices remain in office for four years. They had held faint hope that the Appeal Court would overturn the tribunal’s judgement, which incredulously upheld Mr Bello’s strange election, and that the Supreme Court would deliver the coup de grace.
    Now, Kogites are left walking on thin ice. They are caught between court judgements that rely on anything but the law on the one hand, and the fear of punishment the Bello government would inflict on them for the next three years and more should he win the third legal battle. Their only remaining hope is the Supreme Court. They are anxious to see whether the apex court’s judgement would be based on law or on politics, on the illogic that drove the tribunal to give its strange, delusional judgement, or on the apoplectic suppositions that stretched the judgement of the Appeal Court to breaking point. Twice the courts had embraced sophistry; now Kogites are not sure whether they can find any court left to embrace law. It is, however, reassuring that James Abiodun Faleke decided to fight the case rather than submit to the irreparable and dishonourable option of joining Mr Bello’s farcical ticket. Should he lose in the Supreme Court, he will still keep his honour rather than forfeit it in the governor’s sewer, and history will deal very kindly with him.
    This column will not revisit the judgements of June and August. Everything the public needs to know was copiously addressed in this place when the tribunal went off on a tangent unknown to law last June. Whatever else should be said will be kept unsaid until after the Supreme Court has had its final say. Good or bad, even if the judgement is finally based on law, not politics as has been the case, the outcome will have far-reaching impact now and in the future. The justices presiding over the case have a historic burden thrust on their shoulders, and the eminent and powerful politicians interested in tailoring the case to suit their own whims also have a fateful date with history. Both must know of course that posterity is the cruelest judge ever. It will talk, and it will voice its opinion with thunder; for after all, ‘conscience is an open wound that only truth can heal.’

  • Modu Sheriff’s  intransigence

    Modu Sheriff’s intransigence

    THE legal jousting going on for the control of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) does not seem to be ending soon. Ali Modu Sheriff has locked horns with Ahmed Makarfi in a deadly game that has defied every attempt to make peace. But the balance of power favours Senator Makarfi, with the wealthy Senator Sheriff however sustaining his adamantine resolve to reclaim control of the party gifted him in February for three months.
    No matter what Senator Sheriff does, the party will not support him. They distrust him, and are wary of his money. They have already thrown in their lot with his opponent, whose tenure they have extended for 12 months. At the centre of the conflict are Governors Ayo Fayose of Ekiti and Nyesom Wike of Rivers, two quarrelsome, voluble and impatient politicians. Had they shown the wisdom and sound judgement needed to pull their party out of the mess it found itself, they would have avoided the mistakes that pushed them into Senator Sheriff’s fatal embrace.
    Ex-president Obasanjo said the PDP was a dying party. It won’t die, at least not now. Instead, the party will defeat Senator Sheriff’s resolve and regain some of its lustre. But whether they will win in 2019 will depend on whether the factors that predisposed the APC to victory in 2015 align in their favour between 2018 and 2019.

  • NHRC takes bold, sensible lead

    NHRC takes bold, sensible lead

    AFTER completing its review of the 2007 and 2011 polls, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has released a 284-page report indicting some 118 politicians and officials for criminal offences and other general administrative, professional or judicial misconduct. The indictments were made pursuant to a review of available election petition cases, and were intended to serve as bases for the Minister of Justice and other administrative bodies to prosecute offenders or punish those who committed infractions, said the NHRC Executive Secretary, Bem Angwe. Immediately the report was released, it became hugely controversial, with many of those indicted already asserting their innocence or entirely denouncing the report. If what has been described as a bold step to sanitise and reform the electoral process is not to be lost, the Minister of Justice will have to prepare to prosecute those indicted, while other institutions must bring disciplinary measures to bear on their indicted officials in line with in-house rules and regulations.

    Though the NHRC indictments are controversial, especially given the many high-profile names mentioned in the report, some of whom have begun to cry foul, many of the indictments have been based on completed and unchallenged legal processes. There is no reason for the Justice ministry and other affected institutions to pull any punches in bringing to account everyone mentioned in the report. They have been availed of the facts of the cases; it is now left for the government to act firmly if the electoral process is to be sanitised and restructured for enhanced operations. Former governors, a former electoral chairman, senators, security officials and even judicial officers have all been mentioned. It is inconceivable that this very thorough report would be ignored.

    The NHRC under its former executive secretary, Chidi Odinkalu, and its current boss, Prof Angwe, has been a model in bureaucratic tact. The Commission is fortunate to have at its helm men who are more anxious about defending human rights and establishing the truth than compromising both assignments for fear of the government’s reaction. The NHRC is thus a model public institution in Nigeria determined to sustain its independence, nurture its courage, and seek to promote the well-being of Nigerians. Dr Odinkalu had been particularly outspoken when he supervise the Commission, and had discharged his tasks with great aplomb. Prof Angwe seems, so far, tarred with the same brush. The principles undergirding the formation of the NHRC demand no less of its leaders, though it speaks volumes of the character of its two executive secretaries that they have managed to build and sustain an enviable reputation for the organisation. Nigerians may gradually begin to repose trust in the Commission and avail it of cases of human rights abuses not remedied at lower levels.

    One of the most celebrated cases handled by the NHRC since 2010 was the investigation of the killing of squatters in Abuja in September 2013. It discharged that responsibility admirably, though a closure to the case is yet to be achieved. In that raid at a location in Apo Quarters of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), eight squatters were killed inside an uncompleted building in the city, while 11 more sustained bullet wounds. The joint raid by the military and the Department of State Service was ostensibly to eliminate a small colony of Boko Haram elements. But after investigations, the NHRC found the army and DSS culpable. The squatters, many of whom belonged to various artisanal associations in the FCT, were neither criminals nor members of the Boko Haram sect. The Commission then ordered that substantial compensations be paid to survivors of the violence as well as families of the slain men.

    Indeed, there has been no case investigated by the NHRC where it demonstrated timidity in the face of hostile law enforcement agencies or the government itself. Importantly, too, it has substantially demonstrated competence and thoroughness. The Apo killings investigation was probably the archetype. Now, in an unprecedented move, the Commission has done remarkably well to put a strong focus on election crimes and other electoral infractions. By taking this first tentative and momentous step, it reinforces the argument that electoral crimes are so significant that they impact sometimes very savagely on the survival of the polity. For those crimes not to be swept under the carpet, the NHRC has completed its review, mentioned names, some of them well-known personalities, and asked that they be prosecuted and/or punished.  The relevant authorities must now complement the effort of the NHRC by acting on the report in cases where their staff are mentioned. Fortunately, court judgements are available to serve as a starting point. If the electoral process is to be sanitised, action must be taken on the NHRC report.

    Given its antecedents, not to say its painstaking thoroughness, it is expected that the anticipated NHRC’s report on the December Zaria clash between the army and Shiite members will likely be more impactful if it is taken from the perspective of human rights rather than security. The challenge thereafter will be how the government at federal and state levels will handle the report or prosecute offenders if indictments are established with the customary candour the Commission is noted for. The Kaduna State government has already published the report of the Justice Mohammed Garba-led panel on the Army-Shiites clash. While the report clearly established extra-judicial killings against the army, it hemmed and hawed in assigning responsibility for the clash. It is unlikely any other panel will find the extra-judicial killings committed by soldiers justified by the intransigence or even irrationality of protesting Shiites. The NHRC report will, therefore, likely be more trenchant and discomfiting, especially in view of the fact that the Shiites allege that between 500 and 1000 of their members were killed in that December encounter.

    Unlike the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the DSS, and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) which are either overbearing, unduly feared or celebrated, the NHRC is less hysterical and virtually anonymous. In fact, until the Apo killings and its celebrated verdict, the Commission seemed to wink in the dark. Yet, it had apparently always worked conscientiously, perhaps now as Nigeria’s preeminent model public institution. Had the police worked as diligently as the NHRC without waiting to be ordered by the executive, and had they not preoccupied themselves with reading the faces and lips of the executive in matters they think government interests needed to be protected, law enforcement work would be tremendously boosted, and the public would have some measure of confidence in the justice system. The NHRC has its enabling law, an Act in 1995 establishing it, and the 2010 amended Act. It has since then not waited to be ordered around. Other institutions also have their enabling laws, but have remained at the beck and call of the executive. The mindset must change for these other public institutions to function without cultural, political or governmental biases.

    If the NHRC continues to boast of competent and independently-minded leaders, it can be relied upon to function within the laws establishing it and the framework of the tradition and culture fostered by its foundation leaders. It has worked hard and passionately, and it has kept its head when many other institutions are losing theirs. All that remains is to live up to its culture of fearless intervention in the grave and sometimes portentous issues that affect human rights. Nigeria is a signatory to United Nations and African Bill of Human Rights, but it has fared very badly in respecting them, leading some non-governmental organisations like the Amnesty International to indict Nigeria on series of rights abuses. If it sustains its courage in doing what is right, as indeed it has done so far, the NHRC could help Nigeria gradually transform from a country reeling under impunity to one sensitive about the rights and privileges of its citizens.

  • Budget padding sails into definitional labyrinth

    Budget padding sails into definitional labyrinth

    ABDULMUMIN Jibrin, the bitter and combative House of Representatives member from Kano State, has continued his unrelenting attack on 13 of his colleagues, including Speaker Yakubu Dogara, whom he accused of budget padding and other crimes. For Hon Jibrin, the definition of the crime in question is simple. The 13 members put pressure on him when he was Chairman of the Appropriation Committee, to surreptitiously allocate funds to certain projects particularly in their constituencies. He resisted the pressures as much as he could, he said, but was eventually sacked because he thought the exercise excessive, unlawful and indefensible, and loudly remonstrated against the pracice. Since the scandal broke, a scandal some House members have described as a storm in a teacup, Hon Jibrin has shed more light on what he terms an unlawful exercise and provided documents and petitions to virtually all the law enforcement agencies in the country.

    Hon Dogara, however, argues that there is no crime called budget padding. The legislature is empowered by law to examine the revenue and expenditure estimates submitted by the government, and where necessary reduce or add to them. He has relied on a very narrow technical definition of budgeting, and dares anyone to contradict him. Hear Hon Dogara: “The Constitution talks about the estimates of revenue and expenditure to be prepared and laid before the National Assembly. The Constitution does not mention the word budget. And the reason is very simple. Budget is a law. Going by the very pedestrian understanding of law, which even a part one Law student can tell, is that the functions of government is such that the legislature makes the law, the executive implements, and the judiciary interprets the law.

    “The budget being a law, therefore, means it is only the parliament that can make it because it is a law. And I challenge all of us members of the media and civil society organisations  (CSOs) to look at our law and tell me where it is written that the president can make a budget. What I am saying is further reinforced by Section 80(4) of the Constitution which says that no money shall be withdrawn from the Consolidated Revenue Fund or any other fund of the federation except in the manner prescribed by the National Assembly. I want this thing to sink so that we can understand it from here and perhaps it may change the ongoing discourse.

    “If you say the National Assembly doesn’t have the powers to tinker with the budget; that we just pass it. When it is prepared and laid we turn it into a bill. If it is a bill how do other bills make progression in the parliament in order to become law?…The budget is a law and nobody can object to the fact that only the legislature can make law, so it is only the parliament that can conclude it.”  Hon Dogara then concludes that no lawmaker can be investigated or prosecuted for a crime such as budget padding, which he argues does not exist.

    Former speaker Ghali Umar Na’Abba appears to toe the same Speaker Dogara line of argument. Hear him waffling about padding: “Well, it all depends from what angle one is looking at it. The responsibility for appropriation in this country belongs to the National Assembly, So, there is no way the National Assembly can vote anything and it will be called padding. If you are talking about padding, which I believe is generally accepted to be illegal, it must be a situation whereby certain members of the National Assembly will add certain items of expenditure behind their colleagues. If any item of expenditure is added behind the backs of other members, then that item can be said to be illegal and it can be called padding.”

    In sum, there are about four definitions of budget padding mesmerising everyone out there. One, that there is nothing like padding. Hon Dogara and his co-accused subscribe to this definition. Two, that if it is done surreptitiously behind the backs of fellow lawmakers, then it becomes padding. Otherwise, it is not an offence. In this group is former Speaker Na’Abba. Three, that it is padding when funds are allocated unlawfully and specifically by essentially presiding officers who have now been described as a camorra. Here Hon Jibrin stands regally. But what if the revised estimates, whether openly done or covertly done, were nonetheless passed by the House in plenary? And, four, that any expenditure not included in the estimates by the executive could not be added by the legislature, and certainly not secretly. Here the public stands. But what if the executive saw the additions and nonetheless assents? And why couldn’t legislators assume the same responsibility in adding to the estimates as they do subtracting from the estimates?

    Obviously, the country is unnerved by a definitional crisis. It will not be easily resolved. In the implausible opinion of Hon Dogara, the law enforcement agencies, who in responding to the petitions of Hon Jibrin have begun investigations, will meet a brick wall sooner rather than later. What is not in doubt, however, is that quite some secrecy accompanied the reworking of the estimates submitted by the executive, and either because of collusion or carelessness, the altered figures were passed by the lawmakers in plenary, up to the Senate which has appeared to maintain a deafening silence, and assented to by an executive wearied by public grumblings. If the legislature thinks it is not confronted by a crime in the ordinary and open meaning of the word ‘padding’, it nevertheless faces a moral quandary regardless of the lessons lawmakers have presumably learnt from the fiasco. Overall, neither the legislature nor the ruling APC can pretend that the controversy can be wished away or resolved as long as those who voted them into office remain disgruntled and befuddled.

  • Angry judges endure tough governmental challenges

    Angry judges endure tough governmental challenges

    FOR some time to come, Nigerians will remember the Muhammadu Buhari presidency for, among other things, its uneasy relationship with the judiciary. The times are unusual, and to remedy the damage done to the country by those who have exploited loopholes to destroy the country’s financial system, the government and its law enforcement and anti-graft agencies have felt impelled to enact and execute desperate remedies. In its response to these desperate remedies, the judiciary perches on the horns of a dilemma. They are aware of the popularity of the government’s desperate measures, but they are also sworn to dispense justice in accordance with the law, whether that law is weak or not, adequate or not. The government is not similarly discomfited. As this column noted many months back, its leading lights know how popular their measures are and have remained. More keenly, they also recognise that many provisions of the law, which they privately scorn, are unable to accommodate the strong-arm tactics needed to compel suspects to disgorge the loot they have ferried away with freakish, cartoonish delight.

    How the judiciary and the Buhari presidency resolve this irritating dilemma will determine how successful the campaigns against financial malfeasance are, and what lasting impact they would leave on the future of Nigeria in terms of social, financial and political stability. So far, if signals are not misread, there is little to indicate that the impact would be lasting or salutary. Both arms of government would therefore need to find common grounds anchored on the constitution and the law to develop and fine-tune approaches that would have such salutary impact. If they do not find that common ground, the conflict between the two arms will continue, and probably fester to the point of damaging the polity and encouraging self-help, an attitude already evident in most parts of the country among various competing and conflicting ethnic and religious groups.

    In July alone, three judges demonstrated how angry they were at the manner some government agencies were carrying out their constitutional responsibilities. Case one involves an aide of Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State, Abiodun Agbele who was detained between July 1 and July 21. Arrested around June 27 by the EFCC for his alleged role in laundering N1.2bn on behalf of the Ekiti governor, according to reports, he was awarded five million naira as damages for wrongful and illegal detention. An angry Justice Olukayode Adeniyi of the Federal Capital Territory High Court condemned what he described as EFCC’s ‘gross abuse of powers’ and ‘arrogant display of executive might’. The EFCC in turn described the judgement as curious.

    Case two involves retired Air Commodore Umar Mohammed who was ordered remanded in prison custody by Justice Nnamdi Dimgba of the Federal Capital Territory High Court. The retired air force officer, who was a member of the presidential committee on arms procurement, had been arraigned for money laundering and other charges. But instead of keeping him in prison custody, the Department of State Service (DSS), which arraigned him, kept him in their own custody for days presumably to complete some paper work. An incensed Justice Dimgba lashed out at the DSS, saying: “I take a strong exception to this type of behaviour; when the court orders that someone be kept in prison custody, the person ought to be kept in prison and not in the office. If the people at the DSS want to become judge and do their job as well, I am ready to vacate my office for them, but as long as I am still here, I take an exception to them flouting the orders of the court. Once processes have been filed in court, it is no longer in their hands, and the order of the court must be obeyed.” There was no punishment meted out to the DSS operatives who flouted the order, not even a censure, nor a query, nor a slap on the wrist.

    Case three is strictly speaking not a part of the arms scandal trials. It was a regular corruption case which drew the ire of the trial judge, Justice Oluwatoyin Ipaye of a Lagos State High Court, Ikeja. She also had very harsh words for the EFCC and the commission’s lawyer, Babatunde Sonaiki. “It appears that you are keen on taking the laws into your hands,” she told the EFCC counsel. “Why would you go before another court for this kind of order (a forfeiture order) when the matter is before me? This kind of action is what is giving the judiciary a bad name.” The EFCC had recklessly engaged in what the judge described as forum shopping to get an order it was unable to secure from her court.

    Another earlier case involving Col Nicholas Ashinze, an aide of the former National Security Adviser (NSA), Col Sambo Dasuki (retd), outraged a judge. This column drew attention to it last May. The colonel had been admitted to bail, but the EFCC ignored the order and kept their quarry. Furious, Justice Yusuf Halilu, the trial judge, blurted out: “The EFCC is a creation of the law. The court will not allow it to act as if it is above the law. It is remarkable to note that the motto of the EFCC is that nobody is above the law, yet they are acting as if they are above the law. The EFCC Act is not superior to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. The respondents in this matter have not behaved as if we are in a civilised society. They have behaved as if we are in a military dictatorship, where they arrest and release persons at will. The respondents, I must be bold to say  the EFCC and the Army  have behaved like illiterates.”

    The anger of the judges is not surprising. They were not wrong to feel besieged by the government’s brusque manner of relating with a judiciary they had at various fora and in trenchant words described as equally corrupt as the suspects they were defending. If lasting and impactful progress in the anti-graft war is to be achieved, the government must find a better way to fight the war lawfully. After all, the executive arm has the leeway to propose a welter of reforms in the judiciary to expedite court processes, engender efficiency in the courts, and remunerate judges in such a manner as to sustain them above the proverbial suspicion of Caesar’s wife. The government can’t hope to put the cart before the horse and expect a miracle.

    Just as the legislature is not perfect and is in need of urgent reforms and cleansing, both the executive and the judiciary also share in the blame of poor justice delivery and destabilisation of the country’s economy and politics. Rather than engage in blame game, the Buhari presidency must be persuaded to recognise the limits of throwing caviar to the general as it has unwisely done so far. With the people on its side, sensibly or otherwise, and with the legislature fairly amenable to passing relevant laws to quicken the pace of justice delivery, the government should seize the opportunity to formulate policies and programmes that are capable of sustaining the effort to bequeath a better and cleaner judiciary to future generations. But should the government and its agents keep on seeing the struggle with the judiciary as a sanctimonious fight for the upper hand, they would only succeed in passing the nuisance on to coming generations.

  • Far less ingenuity in state governments

    Far less ingenuity in state governments

    STATE governments owing backlog of salaries are not the only ones ignoring the lessons and perils of the current economic crisis. Everyone, including the progressively conservative Muhammadu Buhari presidency, is holding on stubbornly to the unworkable structures and habits of the past. The economy is not what it used to be, and will not be for many generations to come except revolutionary disruptions to the world economic system occur. The Nigerian political substructure has bred and fed the ogre of oppression, confusion and stagnation, yet governments and politicians have carried on blithely, gorging on the benefits of the past few decades and capitalising on the lassitude of incompetent officials. Until political iconoclasts, who are by the way few and far between, meet the great and grand demands of the times, retrogression and mediocrity will be the order of the day.

    Last week, the Oyo State governor, Abiola Ajimobi, resigned himself to hopelessness over the state’s salary crisis. There was no way he could pay the N5.2bn wage bill from a N2.2bn income from the federation account, he groaned. Mathematically, he is right, for even if the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) were shot up to N3bn, it would still be impossible to pay. The state owes its workers about seven months salaries. The governor did not say it, but he implied that for decades, the country’s lack of fiscal federalism and the abysmal and suffocating unitarist structure gifted the nation by backward-looking military dictatorships had wreaked unquantifiable havoc on the country’s sense of innovation and experimentation. He did not also say it, but he implied that even he had become unimaginative and unsuited for the complex demands of the moment.

    Mr Ajimobi is not alone. Even before the Oyo governor yielded to frustration and paralysis, and labour unions had begun to give him constipation, Osun State under Governor Rauf Aregbesola had become the poster child of unpaid salaries and stymied development, with the state pockmarked by unfinished but ambitious projects. Much more than Oyo, Osun presented a curious economic conundrum. Oyo does not pretend to any ideological cover for its stasis. The state economy was and still is a simple, uncomplicated arrangement located gingerly somewhere between mixed economy and ad hocism. Whatever comes from the federation account is added to the little IGR they can rake up, and a few development programmes are thus initiated to justify eight years or so in government with all its garish panoplies. Their ambition is moderate, their governing template is simple, and their future hangs precariously and wistfully between Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe and Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island.

    Osun, on the other hand, though its salary difficulties are not less complex or profound or disruptive, has managed to design a governance structure that vaults to the progressive and globalising future as pretentiously as it harks back to a socialist past. Not only was sufficient attention not paid to the state’s revenue base in anticipation of a possible general economic downturn, the state also embarked on such catatonic social re-engineering, especially in its educational sector, that it is hard to imagine anything more convulsive or more stiffening. But the state bristles against critics who insist that rather than reclassify or restructure, what the state needs is attention to quality, and that that quality can be achieved without the disruptions that have seemed to aggravate religious sensibilities and paint the governor in unflattering sectarian colour. The state thinks the future will underscore the far-sightedness of the reforms being carried out under Gov Aregbesola, and prove sceptics wrong. This is a tough verdict to coax out of posterity.

    Perhaps the most frightening response to the economic crisis being faced by the country is the one inspired by the gaudy Gov Rochas Okorocha of Imo State. He is probably the most charismatic governor of the three used as examples of the paralyses debilitating the states. He may even be the most charismatic governor in this term. He is intelligent, eloquent and sometimes oratorically profound. The media reports many of his giant developmental strides favourably, and applaud his social finicalness and savvy. But, like many others, he suffers frequent bouts of flights of fancy. A week after he flirted with the unusual and befuddling idea of a three-day working week, the rest apparently to be invested in agriculture willy-nilly, even by those averse to farming, he simply presented the state with a fait accompli. That is his own ingenious way of solving a problem that is deep and systemic, a problem that requires profundity, not capriciousness. Does he by any chance hope to cut their salaries to accommodate their new work schedule? Would the unions entertain such driveling resort to arithmetic frolic?

    The three states in discourse are not exhaustive of the lack of profundity in statecraft. They are merely an indication of what is almost a total Nigerian experience, as more than two-thirds of the states have met cash flow problems with near total lack of imagination. Unfortunately, the voters are themselves unable to distinguish between the many distorted realities politicians confront them with, between truth and falsehood, between genuineness and chimera. There is, therefore, no serious effort to interrogate those who present themselves for elective posts to find out how suitable they are, what the amperage of their temperament is, how their secularity rate, whether the depth of their knowledge can be plumbed, and what the scope of their wisdom is in comparison with the wisecracks and homilies of the ancients. It is indeed galling that most states are afflicted by poor leadership, just as the national level, in more than 50 years, has not found even one man worthy to be called a leader in the truest sense of the word.