Category: Sunday

  • Poll 2023 and Supreme Court whirlwind

    Poll 2023 and Supreme Court whirlwind

    In the end, after intemperate political leaders and their equally peevish supporters fulminated against the judiciary, sparing their worst abuse for the Supreme Court, the highest court in the country has opted for conservatism and status quo. There was not one of the eight governors whose elections were challenged that was sacked by the Supreme Court. Despite the thunderous blather by the opposition and the foul-spoken cynics who took on the judiciary, no election in 2023 was decided by the courts. They were all decided at the polling booths in Plateau, Kano, Zamfara, Lagos, Bauchi, Abia, Cross River, and Ebonyi States. In at least three of the states, the top court disagreed with the Court of Appeal and sustained the elections of their agitated governors. Do the cases reflect the Supreme Court as conservative? It is not clear. Do the cases indicate that the top court is generally mindful of the security implications of upturning an election that seems popular, even when the law was not strictly adhered to? Perhaps.

    What is, however, obvious is that the country’s political temperature has been calmed considerably, and the Supreme Court has become the darling of the populace. It does not imply that on a hypothetical tomorrow, those who lose elections and their supporters would still not take on the judiciary with a lot of sloganeering, but it does mean that gradually and quietly, both the political system and the judiciary are maturing. Perhaps if the public can begin to understand the courts and decipher their jurisprudential patterns they will moderate their expectations and become less litigious. Meanwhile, the country can bask in the peace and tranquility which the decided cases have brought upon the country, at least until the next general election. The Bola Tinubu administration will be glad to have this cup pass over them, and the president in particular will have the confidence now and in the future to speak about and defend the judiciary in the face of traducers. Now, he has put the lie to all allegations of manipulating the courts in favour of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).

    It is significant that the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PD), particularly their governors’ forum, has lauded the Supreme Court for delivering justice and upholding democracy. They said it was reassuring that ultimately the votes of the people counted, insisting in a statement by the director general of the forum that they had always believed the apex court would do justice. The judgements of last Friday, they chorused in ecstasy, “represented the triumph of democracy…and reaffirmed the sanctity of the ballot as the determining factor for democratic legitimacy.” On its own, the APC, too relieved by the juridical turn of events to be disappointed, said in a statement by its national publicity secretary, Felix Morka, that the Supreme Court judgements “provide a strong affirmation of the authority, vibrancy and independence of the judiciary.” Cynics may continue waiting for the other shoe to drop; but for now, despite the setback in Kano and Plateau States, which cases the APC thought were slam dunk, they are relieved to get the country back on an even keel. In any case, they have the presidency.

    The PDP’s hands have been strengthened by its victories in the courts, and its position as the pre-eminent opposition party underscored. Peter Obi, the Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate in the last election – not the party itself which has not grown beyond its amorphous structure – attempted in his January 1, 2024 address to his supporters to claim that pre-eminent opposition position. His claim was anchored on nothing other than the name recognition he had conjured when he played a divisive but nevertheless impactful politics in the last polls. His challenge may have now been laid to rest, but he will of course still attempt to energise his base by instigating religious and ethnic fervor. Those factors will, however, not acquire any currency in the medium run nor play any significant role in the next election cycle. And with only one state in the LP kitty and a handful of national lawmakers who would be keen to look out for themselves especially in the absence of a unifying ideology for their party, the grand ambition to play the leading opposition party may be dead on arrival.

    On the list of winners is the judiciary itself. The Supreme Court has sometimes been unadvisedly acerbic in denouncing judgements from the lower courts, in this instance the election tribunals and the Court of Appeal, but notwithstanding that inattentiveness to legal nicety, the judiciary emerges from the election cases in this election cycle a winner. It now has an opportunity to put its house in order once and for all. If the court of last resort genuinely thinks the tribunals and the Court of Appeal had been less than stellar in their judgements, then together with the authorities who appoint judges, they must get their act together and put the best thinkers and jurists on the bench. But who says the Supreme Court can’t be fallible?

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    After the fateful judgements of last Friday and those of the days and weeks before, Nigeria’s political elite can now heave a sigh of relief. It is time for real governance. Having been reprieved by the courts, over which they rhapsodised the beauty of democracy, it is up to them to entrench democracy in the states, eschew the damaging and corrosive act of internal wrangling, sanitise the processes of local government elections, and run their states with Houses of Assembly and judiciary unfettered by executive strictures. They owe the country and future generations this sanity.

    Heavy hints of Poll 2027

    It is in the character of politics that even before an administration completes its first term, hints of a second term would begin to echo from distant peaks. Last Sunday, former Benue governor Samuel Ortom threw caution to the wind at a luncheon in Port Harcourt hosted by FCT minister Nyesom Wike when he declared that the G-5 governors, a coalition of aggrieved PDP governors in the last polls, would back President Bola Tinubu for second term. It is unlikely anyone craved the offer, certainly not Mr Wike nor anyone in the presidency. But the exuberant Mr Ortom made the offer anyway. Some aides of at least two of the G-5 governors reportedly insisted no such meeting was held, let alone reached a decision on 2027 and who to support.

    Pleasantly surprised that religion has not play any role in the Tunubu administration, contrary to the fears of many Christians, and will probably not play any significant role going forward, Mr Ortom and other like-minded politicians may feel more relaxed about speaking up in favour of the administration. If President Tinubu can finally get a hang of the economy and turn the corner, there would likely be a stampede to the APC in the years ahead. But 2027 is still a long way off, though not long enough to quieten the unease in the PDP which has begun to fear that dislodging the APC in 2027 would be truly a tricky and herculean affair. The PDP presidential candidate in the last poll, Atiku Abubakar, first voiced that fear weeks ago when he suggested at an inter-party conference that without a coalition of opposition parties, the ruling party could not be unhorsed. Whatever the case, soon, everyone will begin to talk of 2027 except the president can put a lid on such premature permutations.

  • Betta Edu affair presents difficult options

    Betta Edu affair presents difficult options

    Right from the creation of the Humanitarian and Poverty Alleviation ministry in August 2019, Nigeria never got the social safety net matter right. Mired in controversy about misapplied funds, and marred by official incompetence, the ministry wobbled on until early this year when it finally imploded, beginning with the sacking of Halima Shehu, head of the National Social Investment Programme Agency (NSIPA). There were allegations of misappropriated funds totaling some N37bn from a pool of over N40bn reportedly intercepted before it was fiddled. A little later, even before the corpse of the former wrongdoer, Mrs Shehu, was embalmed, her legatee, Betta Edu, the now suspended Humanitarian Affairs minister, was also accused of fiddling N585m through shady contracts and malfeasant payments in league with the Internal Affairs minister, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, a former national lawmaker and brilliant and eloquent technocrat.

    Sadly, the Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation ministry has become a cesspit of thievery and a seething cauldron of controversy. Draining that waste pipe now appears impossible. Worse, and far more than the complicated and sometimes unresponsive Nigerian economy, the ministry and its incorrigible officials may be presenting President Bola Tinubu the biggest test of his presidency so far. He has begun to deal with the seedy reports coming from the controversial ministry by suspending the minister, Dr Edu, and ordering the anti-graft agencies to probe some of the ministry’s former officials as well as the ministry itself. It is unlikely the anti-graft agencies will find anything palatable. More crucially, the public will watch with keen interest how the president handles the entire affair. They will use whatever he does as both a barometer to measure the tensile stress of his administration’s moral fibre and an indication of the fabled courage he is thought to possess. Will he pass muster?

    Commentators, particularly from the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Labour Party (LP), have been trenchant. But analysts sympathetic to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), and who appreciate that the president has been taking the matter methodically, will continue to be restrained in their commentaries. However, the president’s attention will ineluctably be drawn more to the fulminations of the opposition, even though, given his steely interior, he will likely refuse to be stampeded. In short, he is today confronting three major nightmares: what to do with the offending and recalcitrant ministry; how to handle the naïve and hapless Dr Edu; and how to treat the associated scandal involving the high-flying Internal Affairs minister, Mr Tunji-Ojo.

    The ministry is barely five years old, while Dr Edu is 37, and Mr Tunji-Ojo is 41. The president will eventually resolve the matter, and he will probably do the right thing, but his administration will not go unscathed. The reasons are legion.

    Unlike his predecessor, ex-president Muhammadu Buhari, who was generally inured to scandals, scornful of being dictated to by the public, and generally uninterested in sacking erring appointees, President Tinubu sets store by strict public moral code. The Humanitarian Affairs ministry scandals call upon him to put his money where his mouth is. He must already be wondering whether the so-called juicy ministry with about five agencies under it is worth keeping, for it seems designed to birth, nurture and promote scandal. Not only is the ministry riddled with foundational and ethical issues, as far as the civil service is concerned, it is generally superfluous. Disaster management and poverty alleviation can be domiciled elsewhere and structured to promote efficiency and scrupulous financial management. The ministry is already being investigated by the Co-ordinating Minister of the Economy. He will probably link the financial malfeasance in the ministry to the failure to respect financial rules and regulations, the complicity or cowardice of officials, and the weakness of standards that has nurtured a culture of abuse and exploitation of payment loopholes in the civil service. These anomalies are exposed only when internal disagreements break into the open.

    The case of Dr Edu seems all but settled. The president will be unable to keep her, even though he will be sorry to see her go. The 37-year-old is a bundle of talent. No one qualifies as a medical practitioner without having brains. More importantly, she brought to everything she did an uncommon passion and drive. She proved her intellectual and elocutionary mettle during the campaigns when she chaired the women wing of the APC.

    Pretty, fair complexioned, and brainy, she was the closest thing to the ideal. Imbued with the strength of youth and eager to prove herself in any group, Dr Edu was neither bashful nor boastful. Alas, that was the exterior the public saw. It is not clear whether she deliberately projected and marketed that meretricious exterior, but that was what the public saw and reveled in. Months into her appointment as minister, however, her meteoric rise dimmed to a dismal and despairing low glow. She was reportedly unloved in her ministry, where she was said to have ridden roughshod over senior and critical ministry staff who could have helped to prevent the catastrophe that befell her. That fatal flaw of tactlessness and poor judgement finally undid her in a little over four months after her appointment.

    Dr Edu will likely drag Mr Tunji-Ojo down with her. But more accurately, it is the more exposed and crafty Interior minister that will drag her down. He is another brilliant apparatchik with a string of enviable qualifications before he scaled his mid-20s. A dapper young man, he was a precocious lawmaker who came into wealth very early on the wings of his eloquence, self-confidence, and can-do spirit. He proved himself in the House of Representatives where he cleverly positioned himself under the wing of former Speaker, Femi Gbajabiamila, and became chairman of the House Committee on the juicy Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC). But as far back as that time, signs of his overweening ambition and unscrupulousness had begun to emerge. He carried the whole feistiness into the Interior ministry where with Midas touch he dished out one brilliant and impactful policy after another, and seemed set to churn out many more engaging policies. Without doubt, it was obvious he hit the ground running and did not seem like a minister whose zeal would soon flag. Even though he had enjoyed some kind of relationship with Dr Edu before their appointments, which some interpreted to be trysts of the most captivating kind, his brilliance probably led to the suspended minister depending on him to energise her ministry. It is unlikely the president can keep him, even if he wants to. Similar to the case of Dr Edu, many Nigerians will be sorry to see Mr Tunji-Ojo go. He holds so much promise.

    In the end what failed the two scandalised ministers is not their intellectual endowment or passion for the job, or even loyalty, or impetuousness. Indeed, both had likeable personalities, and both are pleasant to look at. What undid them is something far more sinister, something few people can boast of, something so nuanced and ethereal that it is sometimes difficult to define: their lack of character. Character may be difficult to define, but it is not impossible. The dictionary definition paints character as ‘the group of qualities that make an individual’, but it is far deeper than that. It cannot be extricated from sound judgement, intuition, ability to know and do what is right, and capacity to die in the defence of what one believes. As a matter of fact, it is even much deeper. Both Dr Edu and Mr Tunji-Ojo were on their way to becoming the poster children of the Tinubu administration, unfortunately for reasons almost entirely superficial. The former lacked social and political tact, and the latter had little strength of character. While the Interior minister rushed to the television and attempted to bamboozle the public with half truths, the Humanitarian Affairs minister told brazen lies about being blackmailed. They forgot that they represented the youth population in the cabinet, a status Dr Edu boasted about in her testimonies to anyone who cared to listen. Now, they have left the president, who obviously holds them in high esteem, little choice but to let them go in order not to damage the administration irreparably.

    President Tinubu is a clever and tested politician. He won’t be deterred from staffing his cabinet with youths, and he will probably look for equally brilliant and passionate candidates to fill the posts that will soon be vacant. He knows there is little he can do to save both ministers, if his administration is not to be tarred with the same brush. But despite throwing caviar to the general on youth appointments, the president may by now have come to the understanding that there is a lot wrong with Nigeria’s political and leadership recruitment methods. It will not be his priority to institute reforms to ensure the training in learning and character of the next generation of leaders, but he will bear it in mind and wait for opportune moment to trigger the movement to retrain, realign and deepen the character of Nigerian youths. Nigerian youths are stupendously endowed in learning, and can stand shoulder to shoulder with the best in the world; but they are almost, like the rest of the world’s youths, bereft of the character that conduces to calm, sturdy, and visionary leadership. The October 2020 EndSARS movement indicated that problem in graphic and ugly details, but most Nigerians either failed or refused to see it. The last elections, largely distorted by youths angry for the wrong reasons and against the wrong people, were also early warnings that Nigeria was not preparing its youths for leadership. The consolation, however, is that most people have difficulty with character. What will be intolerable is if the country’s leadership cadre is populated by such vacuums.

    President Tinubu can do little to save Dr Edu and Mr Tunji-Ojo. He should not attempt it; indeed, he should encourage their exit. It is regrettable both have come to this sorry pass, given their enormous talents, but it is inevitable that they must leave. Though it will be difficult, the president should do his best to find excellent replacements. When he does, he must then turn his gaze to the scheming and grasping civil service that ambushes hated ministers, especially ministers averse to team play. He should also try to institute some kind of informal mentorship programme for youthful ministers, assuming he can find mentors able to give what they have. Then, as perhaps a lasting bequest to Nigeria, the president must find ways of creating a system where leaders are trained, and from which pool the next generation of leaders would be selected. Presidential system does a very poor job of preparing and ennobling such leaders with character, as the United States of America is finding out.

    Okupe, Bwala deepen the mystery

    Last Wednesday, spokesman of the Atiku Abubakar presidential campaign, Daniel Bwala, visited President Bola Tinubu and declared his support. He had leaned in the president’s direction for some weeks before the visit. In summary, he is almost back to the All Progressives Congress (APC) from which he defected shortly after the presidential primaries of the political parties. His defection had been anchored, like so many others, on his opposition to the APC’s Muslim-Muslim presidential ticket. Well, that ticket, against all expectations, won the election handily.

    Another defection, so to say, has heightened the political mystery tremoring the country as Doyin Okupe has huffily left Peter Obi’s Labour Party (LP) for an undisclosed destination. Like Mr Bwala, he is expected to berth safely at a shore soon. Dr Okupe cites ideological reasons for his defection. Indeed, his departure from the LP was even more revelatory of the entire Nigerian political environment and the general absence of principles that undergird and drive politics in these parts.

    In his resignation letter, the amiable medical doctor and politician told the LP leadership: “You will recall that our standard bearer, Mr Peter Obi, myself and others left the PDP abruptly and had to look for a Special Purpose Vehicle in which to contest the 2023 Presidential Elections. The Labour Party, your good self and other members of your executives provided us with this veritable platform with no burdensomeness whatsoever, and for which we were extremely grateful. We did contest the election on the platform of the Labour Party and lost. This makes it exceedingly difficult for me to continue to stay in the Labour Party which is ideologically rooted in the left of the center. I have been a rightist and a Liberal Democrat all my entire life. It is therefore this ideological conflict that makes me seek an exit so that I may continue my political activities with liberalism, sincerity and freedom.”

    A few things jump at the reading public from the letter. One, if the LP had, against the run of play, won the election, it is unlikely that Dr Okupe would be discomfited by ideological differences. Two, he was honest enough, unlike Mr Obi, to disclose that the Obi team looked for a special purpose vehicle, or what is referred to gracelessly in these parts as SPV, to fight for political office. They had no patience for building a party or imbuing it with a clear ideology; they only unscrupulously wanted to win office. Nothing more. And for that purpose, they dispensed with ideology, courted religious divisions, and manipulated their way into infamy, playing on the intelligence of the undiscerning public.

    Dr Okupe was humiliated out of his position as the Director-General of the Obi-Datti Presidential Campaign Organisation after he was convicted for money laundering. He thus had little affection left for the LP; and it is a wonder that he still has a little appetite left for politics. But he is at least a little better than Mr Obi who objurgates both ideology and party structure. The stark fact is that the LP candidate has little understanding of ideology and political structure. Had he won, he would have adopted unstructured and unideological approach to governance, something quite akin to eclecticism or ad hocism.

    A few analysts have suggested that both Mr Bwala and Dr Okupe were agents provocateurs in the parties they worked for during the presidential poll. This is an exaggeration. Mr Bwala was genuinely mistaken about the Muslim-Muslim ticket kerfuffle; and Dr Okupe, who was shunted aside as a political relic, needed an SPV to be relevant in the last polls. Both have had an uncomfortable relationship with their principals, but they are less coarse than the principals they worked for, whether it was the rolling stone, Alhaji Atiku, or the flighty and tedious Mr Obi.

  • How are young Kaduna army recruits in Lagos different from non – indigenes contesting legislative elections in states

    How are young Kaduna army recruits in Lagos different from non – indigenes contesting legislative elections in states

    The Nigerian Army this past week came up with the following Press Release in respect of some young Kaduna state  indigenes who were recruited into the Army  as if they are Lagos state indigenes at the ongoing recruitment exercise:

    “The attention of the Nigerian Army has been drawn to a circulating video on social media depicting the arrest of some fraudulent candidates at the ongoing 86 Regular Recruits Intake, who were caught attempting to short-change indigenous candidates of Lagos State through dubious means.

    The NA wishes to state that the arrest of the fraudulent candidates was a result of the commitment of the NA in upholding a transparent and credible recruitment process in line with its core values of integrity and fairness. The video  is a pointer to one of the processes to which the candidates were subjected in order to ensure that only genuine indigenes of a particular State  are recruited, using the slots of that state and not non indigenes.

    The video itself  clearly shows that the process is transparent, as the State Representative, who is a prominent member of the recruitment team, has been part and parcel of the process and was given unhindered access to do her job by scrutinizing the candidates’ state of origin, to ascertain the genuineness of their indigeneship claims”.

    Please note the words SHORT – CHANGE.

    The Nigerian Army deserves nothing but commendation for this very patriotic action, not just for demonstrating transparency and ensuring equity,  but for pointing Nigeria forward to the way, and manner, it should handle matters in which fairness  should,  mandatorily, apply to ensure equity in matters involving Nigerians of diverse ethnic and cultural background, that is, citizens of a multi – ethnic Nigeria.

    What readily comes to mind, therefore, are elections into the National Assembly as well as state House of Assembly and local government council Areas.

    The extant position of the National Assembly is as follows:”The National Assembly of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is a bicameral legislature established under section 4 of the Nigerian Constitution. It consists of a Senate with 109 members and a 360-member House of Representatives.

    The body, modeled after the federal Congress of the United States, is supposed to GUARANTEE EQUAL REPRESENTATION(of states and peoples) with 3 senators to each 36 state, irrespective of size in the Senate, and 1 senator representing the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja”.

    For equity the above should, automatically, render illegal, instances of non – indigenes of a state, contesting  election into any of the Local Government council Areas, the State House of Assembly and  the National Assembly, with a view to representing a district where he/she is, at best, only a sojourner, as a Senator, member  House of Representatives, the state House or even LGA.

    This aberration,  became prevalent within the rancorous Lagos state Peoples Democratic Party since 1999  because its leaders have not only always been quarrelling among themselves, fighting over funds sent from its Abuja headquarters rather than working in harmony to ensure victory at elections. Since what is paramount to them is to corner such funds, the party in the state, has failed, woefully since the return to civilian rule in 1999, a whole 25 years, to win any state wide election, perennially playing second fiddle in the state. 

    This was always the source of their quarrels, especially ahead of  elections. In an effort to make up for their lack of both political strategy and electoral support in the state, they have always, cheaply, resorted to gifting non indigenes the chance to contest elections, especially in constituencies where the ethnic group of such persons are hugely concentrated hoping to have easy victories even without putting in the necessary hard work.

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    What is particularly nauseating is the fact that you find a preponderance of this lazy approach to electoral victory within the Lagos state PDP, except that their cousins, the Labour party, in the same state, also employed the same “working to the answer” tactics in the 2023 general elections, the reason they both met their Waterloo. 

    Unlike this laizerfaire Omo Eko political strategy, politicians in other parts of the country, always prefer to work  their hearts out at achieving victory in elections, with considerable success.

    The result has been that though these Lagos state PDP big wigs  have controlled the party in the state since inception, they have had nothing to show as success, the reason many of the party’s erstwhile consequential leaders are now back in the progressive political camp, e g APC, where they originally cut their political teeth.

    Galling and indeed, puke inducing, is the fact that the usual beneficiaries of this lazy man’s tactics, are those who cannot let go of even a mere councillorship seat back home, being ever so protective of whatever is theirs.

    Broadly concerning Indigeneship, gamji.com posits that:”First, there are fundamental differences between  indigeneship and citizenship, both theoretically and practically”. “Whereas indigeneship is a natural link between a person and a geographical location – his ancestral home – where he traces his roots through a blood lineage and genealogy that puts him in contact with his kin and kindred, citizenship is a man-made arrangement that seeks to confer on a person certain rights that are enjoyed by all persons in a certain geographical location”.

    “Secondly, citizenship has limitations that militate against complete assimilation and participation in the activities of the people whose citizenship is bestowed on an individual while indigeneship, in most instances, does not contain such restrictions”.  “Whereas non indigenes can participate in the political, social and religious activities of their areas of   residence, (up to a point) the fact that legislative seats are allocated to states on basis of equality in Nigeria, and EVERY NIGERIAN BELONGS TO A PARTICULAR STATE, non indigenes should, under no circumstances, be eligible to stand election into a legislative body in any state, other than his or her own.

    Rather, those keen on contesting elections into any legislative body should relocate back home to his /her state of origin to satisfy that yearning; the only difference being an election to the office of the President, or Vice – President, neither of which is constitutionally allocated to any state of the federation.

    This is not a lacuna that payment of taxes in any state can cure because you cannot, on the basis of paying your tax, rob another state, and its peoples, of what legitimately belongs to them. It is also not an instance where we can begin to compare apples with oranges, citing what  happens in the UK  or the US, because Nigeria is neither.

    The gamji.com article, in fact, makes this difference very explicit when it states as follows:”Let’s take a look at the US which represents, to many misinformed Nigerians, the ideal of assimilated citizenship. By nature, the US is an immigrant country which means that most residents not only perceive, but recognize and acknowledge, themselves as settler-lords. The Native Americans (which were initially known as American Indians) are recognized as the indigenes (in fact the term native is indicative of this status) and are accorded certain rights and privileges that are not universal in the country. Among the immigrant population (i. e non-native Americans), there are citizens by birth (those born in the US or whose parents are citizens of US ) and those that are bestowed (immigrants into the US who have been accorded citizenship status).

    These are recognized officially as those that could contest for elections into political offices. However, no matter how long you have stayed in the US, and no matter the level of contribution to the development of the country, you are not eligible to contest elections to the office of the President of the United States of America unless you are a citizen of the US by birth”.

    For whatever it is worth, the National Assembly should  make  laws to explicitly state this so that it would become a bounden duty of INEC to ensure that only indigenes of any Nigerian state qualify to contest any legislative election therein.

    Back then to the instant case of the young Army recruits. I would wish to plead that for offering to serve Nigeria, they should be pardoned their offence, promptly released and redeployed to the recruitment centre in their geo- political zone.

    However, should government insist on punishing them, then it should go a step further: arrest whoever it was who facilitated their crime by furnishing them with Lagos State indigeneship certificate, and punish him or her too.

    It’s only then we can say that justice has been served.

    Finally, Gamji.com left us, Nigerians, with the following posers to ponder. I plead we  seriously do so:

    Is an organizational structure based on indigeneship, as it is now, the best for Nigeria ? Do we need a change from this traditional arrangement that has, as its core, the culturally expedient and accepted concept of indigeneship?

    Or

     Are we ready to let go our individual and collective prejudices in favour of a new organizational structure for Nigeria?

  • Atiku, Obi jostle for dominance

    Atiku, Obi jostle for dominance

    A day after Peter Obi, Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate in the 2023 presidential election, donned his party with political grandeur by describing it as the country’s main opposition party, the real main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) indicated that its presidential candidate in last year’s election, former vice president Atiku Abubakar, would contest the next presidential election. Mr Obi’s grandiosity was reflected in his New Year press statement wherein he argued that the LP would contest the presidency again, and he would be their champion. Alhaji Atiku, said his spokesman in the 2023 presidential race, Daniel Bwala, was not only interested in the 2027 race, he would lead a coalition. The spokesman went on, rather facilely, to explain the dynamics of that race and how a coalition would be cobbled together.

    Seven months into the All Progressives Congress (APC) administration, the two opposition parties have begun jostling for relevance and dominance between them. Lightning, it is said, never strikes the same place twice. But it is an idiomatic expression that has no basis in scientific reality, an expression both the PDP and LP are determined to refute by their fractious politics. Both are in the opposition today because in 2023 they despised cooperation. Now, Mr Obi is trying to settle the precedence between the two parties by assuming, regardless of Nigeria’s electoral statistics, that the LP was in the process of adjusting to its ‘natural role’ as the main opposition party. Mr Obi is always highfalutin. The LP has one governor to PDP’s 13, 34 House of Representatives members to PDP’s 102, and eight senators to PDP’s 36. It would take far more esoteric arithmetic to make that unbridgeable disparity translate into LP dominance. But the former LP presidential candidate is never one to be deterred by fact or reality.

    Does Mr Obi really believe himself when he talks about the LP being the main opposition party? It is hard to tell. Those conversant with Nigerian politics and unimpressed by partisan grandstanding will search in vain for any corroboration, no matter how flimsy. His press statements, written addresses, and extempore assertions have never been as elegant or as lucid as he hopes, but somehow, he runs away with the impression that he makes rhetorical impact on a scale worthy of international approbation. “We in the Labour Party,” Mr Obi began grandly and confidently, “have undertaken in the national interest and in our undying commitment to a New Nigeria that is possible, to remain firmly in opposition and, as such, must remain focused going forward. Our collective role in nation-building remains fundamental and obligatory.” Then he launches into a flurry of identity politics, capping it with delusion of grandeur. Said he: “I wish to thank members of the Labour Party, the Obidient Family, friends, and well-wishers of Nigeria for their loyalty, resilience, tenacity, and commitment to true democracy. We will continue ongoing discussions and efforts for the Labour Party to adjust to our new role as Nigeria’s main opposition party. We will continue to constructively engage all Nigerians and our friends, who have now realised the vast implications of the road not taken; and the folly of national interest decisions predicated on sentiments and primordial interests.”

    Mr Obi appears determined, regardless of what the facts say, to play the role he has imagined for himself. He sees himself a fearless and iconoclastic representative and even champion of Nigerian youths, a politician committed to taking the road not travelled. No, his exposition of himself and the role he has assigned his party is not just verbosity, whether written by him or by his speechwriter. His statement in fact demonstrates his unfathomable conviction in his strengths, ideas, and visions for the future. These may be unsubstantial, but he sees the whole matter differently, and his supporters, riding the waves of social media effervescence, have learnt to trust and love him. Mr Obi will keep giving them new things to ponder. They may not be able to make anything out of his statement about “the folly of national interest decisions”, and will probably laugh him to derision when he talks about these decisions, presumably the APC administration’s policies, being “predicated on sentiments and primordial interests”. Their snicker is propelled by the fact that other than Alhaji Atiku’s brief and half-hearted forays into primordialism, Mr Obi was actually the greatest avatar of primordial politics in the last presidential election. He engaged in ethnic baiting as avidly as he basked in religious politics of the most corrosive variety, much of that viciousness put on record and captured on phone taps.

    So far, he has limited his opposition politics to denouncing APC policies with the same sentiments he belabours the ruling party. He has proffered no fresh ideas, demonstrated no genuine convictions, displayed no substantial respect for logic and facts, and paid scant regard to the country’s cultural and political history. The LP is not only factionalised and destitute of a guiding philosophy or ideology, it is delinked from Mr Obi who has little or no experience in founding or running a political party. So, when he speaks about constituting the main opposition to the ruling party, he appears to be talking about his political extravaganza and propaganda as well as his desultory approach to politics. He is, however, unlikely to upstage the bigger, more grounded, more ideological PDP. Whereas the LP is essentially about Mr Obi, and to a lesser extent, its surrogate mother, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), the PDP has wider reach and more indomitable political figures besides Alhaji Atiku. The LP could not make any impact outside Mr Obi; but the PDP, as events will dictate in the coming months, will prove it can do without the paradoxes of its former presidential candidate: his detachment, aloofness, presumptuousness, and monarchical airs.

    Read Also: Atiku and his 2027 calculations

    Mr Obi conflates his demagoguery with substance and ideology, hence the enduring flimsiness of his politics. But the PDP is gearing up for a dramatic resurgence. That resurgence will likely outpace and diminish the LP’s social media frenzy. But whether it can match the APC’s increasing surefootedness remains to be seen. The economy has not yet proved responsive, and the Bola Tinubu administration has not yet chalked up remarkable achievements; but the cognoscenti anchor their conclusions and responses on the magnitude of the depredation of the Muhammadu Buhari years and estimate the tentative impact of the new administration’s ongoing efforts to reset the political and economic substrata. The administration may not have achieved a rhythm yet, but even the most acerbic critic suspects that it is boldly reappraising Nigeria’s governing paradigms. Given the depth of the Tinubu administration in policies and staffing, it is only the PDP that appears capable of producing the oppositional politics Mr Obi has self-servingly spoken about.

    However, if Mr Bwala’s statement accurately reflects the thinking of both the PDP and Alhaji Atiku, it is nevertheless unclear whether the party can pull off the magical coalition they vouchsafed to a wary and frankly disenchanted public last week. When the party was on the cusp of victory in last year’s presidential election, it abhorred mending fences, was indifferent to internal wrangling, called the bluff of disaffected members, and nonchalantly assumed intraparty fights could not sabotage its success. But that factionalism proved lethal. Months after the election, the party and candidate still refused to acknowledge their faults. Instead, they sold themselves the lie that the victorious APC probably rigged the election, or if that was unpersuasive, that the APC candidate was most assuredly unqualified to contest. If they spent months denying their self-inflicted injuries, why do they now confess and yield to the indispensability of putting together a coalition as a winning strategy?

    Spokesman Bwala put it elegantly: “Some elements in the NNPP came out and said they suspended its presidential candidate. In Labour you see what the Apapa group did. They will never allow somebody to rest. In the PDP, you have seen some elements. He (Tinubu) will make sure all the political parties continue to have problems. But once there is a coalition of the parties, some of these people that are giving the headache in the political parties would have been swallowed. For example, once you solved the Nyesom Wike question in PDP, you would have solved all the problems…Sure, he (Atiku) would run…” Mr Bwala appears more realistic than his principal, Alhaji Atiku, who was prodigal with his chances. But perhaps it is still too early to determine whether the coalition of their dream could be cobbled together or, if the leading opposition party unite and bring other aggrieved or fringe parties under their umbrella, whether the president would not anticipate their strategies and, as Mr Bwala himself insinuated, booby-trap their coalition.

    Neither the APC nor President Tinubu is of course invincible. But this is the first time a man with a mind of his own, someone not sponsored by a military or civilian cabal, will assume the presidency on his own steam and with his own resources. The president has not only proved tactical in politics, he has demonstrated courage and an uncanny ability to second-guess his opponents and take the wind out of their sails. How the PDP coalition, even if it incorporates Mr Obi, the LP, and a host of aggrieved groups of governors and lawmakers, can penetrate the APC/Tinubu armour is not exactly clear. But first, it has to be determined whose ego, between the staid and anachronistic Alhaji Atiku and the dreamy and apocalyptic Mr Obi, is more brittle.

  • Plateau attacks: rethinking, responding to insecurity

    Plateau attacks: rethinking, responding to insecurity

    The Plateau State government is yet to publish a definitive list of victims of the Christmas Eve attacks on Bokkos, Barkin Ladi and Mangu local government areas. Police estimates, which at first put the figure at less than hundred, are more conservative. But other estimates put the figure of the dead at well over a hundred, with hundreds more wounded. What is undisputable, however, is that the attacks were neither motivated by herdsmen-farmers misunderstanding nor triggered by religious conflict, despite the endemicity of that factor in Nigeria’s Middle Belt. Some observers think the attacks were motivated by economic factors relating to expropriation of minerals interwoven with pure ethnic cleansing. But given the video recording of the attacks and its dissemination on social media, many analysts have now begun to suspect something more politically sinister.

    Whatever the motives are, it is now more urgent than ever that the federal government find a solution to the festering crisis before the country keels over. And until the factors predisposing the Middle Belt to these ferocious attacks are identified, the solutions will prove elusive. A few religious leaders, including the voluble and generally insensitive Ahmad Gumi, insist the problem is economic, and the answer, negotiation. Killing the attackers, whom he has appropriated into the Islamic faith by his own unusual logic, would be counterproductive, he warned. After all, he concludes, the military response has so far been unable to stanch the flow of blood in those violent regions. He makes no room for the factor of collusion by a section of the security forces. For a long time, too, the herdsmen-farmers struggle for fertile land was thought to be the most important factor in the crisis. The crisis has now, alas, morphed considerably into something more complex, political and subversive. The Christmas Eve attacks, complete with gory video disseminated on social media, shows how complicated the problem has become underneath.

    The country could become engulfed in chaos amidst suspicion that the conflicts are inspired and catalysed by powerful sponsors. The Plateau attacks, most analysts agree, were without any tangible or justifiable provocation. They were targeted and deliberate, and they were planned by external invaders in a manner that they left the police, military and Department of State Service (DSS) flat-footed. It is now the job of the country’s political leadership to rejig the intelligence and security services to prevent or respond massively to such attacks in future. If there is a next time, someone must be held accountable. More importantly, it is now the job of the Tinubu administration to reappraise, reform and retool the country’s security architecture to respond more spontaneously. How could a team of attackers lay siege to communities, slaughter hundreds, and withdraw without being noticed or pursued to their dens? Was there collaboration? Was there internal sabotage? And what has happened to the many communities – over a hundred – sacked and taken over by invaders in years past in a country with government and justice system?

    The Plateau attacks, certainly not the first of their kind, and if care is not taken, may not be the last, were partly designed to achieve predetermined ends. It is time the Tinubu administration reformed the security system. Lethargy needs to end. The routine and perfunctory wailings, if not collusion or indifference, of past administration needs to also end. The country is probably too vast for the size of the security personnel and logistics at the disposal of the administration; it is, therefore, time to recalibrate what is available to deal with the spiraling security crisis. By unearthing the financial malfeasance of the past and investigating the high and mighty, the administration opens itself up to all sorts of subterranean plots. This is of course not time for paranoia; but the government must not pretend that it does not have old and new enemies capable of pulling the strings from a thousand miles away.

    Read Also: Plateau killings: Protesting women burn down traditional ruler’s house

    Assuming there is no sabotage or collusion, one way to respond to localised attacks is by shutting down the affected local government areas and surrounding communities immediately. This should limit the mobility of the attackers and prevent their escape until they are smoked out of their hideaways. It is also time to put together a team to think through the crisis and find adequate and effective ways of responding to banditry and other forms of insurrection. Sheikh Gumi, who empathises more with bandits and herdsmen than their victims, advocates almost exclusive negotiations with the attackers. The administration should instead borrow a leaf from Sri Lanka which ran out of patience and made a final and successful push to uproot the Tamil Tigers in 2009 after a 26-year military campaign. The Tinubu administration will be seeking a fresh mandate in a few years; it should assign itself the next two years or less to deal massively with the agents of destabilisation. Given the administration’s effort to unearth what went wrong with the economy in the past years, it may have unwittingly positioned itself either to win this war soonest or open itself to its enemies to demystify and rubbish it. Both sides to the conflict are in a race for time. The hungrier for victory will undoubtedly win.

  • Not even New Year Holiday can halt Jagaban from rolling the mill

    Not even New Year Holiday can halt Jagaban from rolling the mill

    The last week, being the first in the year 2024 (save for Sunday, which was the last day of the year 2023), rather a week of rest for President Bola Tinubu, largely though. It was the week he defied all odds to keep a tradition alive, on a holiday. However, the week slipped into a quiet mode, at least for about two days, before activities resumed again on Thursday.

    However, as peaceful and silent as the week went, it was during it that Mr President performed two of the activities that are usually reserved for terms; as in no President reads a New Year address twice in a year, just as signing and initiating annual budget is done just once in a year. Any other budget signed can only be supplementary, annual budget is once in a year. These two activities were both done this last week and done same day.

    Although he read the New Year address while still in Lagos, President Tinubu had to return to Abuja, same Monday, the New Year Day, to assent to the N28.78 trillion 2024 Budget. Being a new year and considering all that Nigerians have seen in the last few years, particularly in the months since fuel subsidy removal and the process of abolishing dual foreign exchange windows became issues that the ordinary Nigerian has to know about because of the squeezing effects they have had on the economy, the President ensured to use his message to reassure citizens that their nation and economy are works in progress, soon to yield positive dividends.

    In the message, Jagaban touched on a lot of issues, positives that are soon to become realities for citizens. For each segment of society and the various sectors touching lives, the President had as message of hope; from the investments and efforts to ramp up the growth and healing of the power sector, which is expected to aid industrialisation, to ensuring a new living wage for workers, to projects ongoing in the agriculture sector, the efforts at stabilizing the industrial sector in order to increase job creation and many other steps being taken to give hope to Nigerians.

    “I am well aware that for some time now the conversations and debates have centred on the rising cost of living, high inflation which is now above 28% and the unacceptable high under-employment rate. From the boardrooms at Broad Street in Lagos to the main-streets of Kano and Nembe Creeks in Bayelsa, I hear the groans of Nigerians who work hard every day to provide for themselves and their families. I am not oblivious to the expressed and sometimes unexpressed frustrations of my fellow citizens. I know for a fact that some of our compatriots are even asking if this is how our administration wants to renew their hope.

    “Dear Compatriots, take this from me: the time may be rough and tough, however, our spirit must remain unbowed because tough times never last. We are made for this period, never to flinch, never to falter. The socio-economic challenges of today should energize and rekindle our love and faith in the promise of Nigeria. Our current circumstances should make us resolve to work better for the good of our beloved nation. Our situation should make us resolve that this new year 2024, each and every one of us will commit to be better citizens”, he assured in his message.

    After giving so much hope to Nigerians on New Year Day, the President must have thought sitting back in Lagos would not be the road to actualizing the components and terms of his programme of hope. The next moment, we were informed that Baba was on his way to Abuja, but with no official information as to why he was returning so suddenly, on a day he and everyone around him ought to be celebrating the New Year at home.

    He arrived at the Presidential Villa, in the front of his office at exactly 2pm, received by senior government officials from the executive and legislative arms. He had returned and gathered all those that might have one thing or the other to do with what he was about doing. Merely seeing those gathered at the Villa, it became obvious why he returned on a holiday.

    The President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio; the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas; the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun; Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Atiku Bagudu; the National Security Adviser (NSA), Nuhu Ribadu; the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila; National Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr Abdullahi Ganduje; Chairman of the Senate Appropriation Committee, Olamilekan Adeola; Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Appropriation, Abubakar Bichi, were all with the President when he signed the budget.

    A summary of the 2024 Budget, as approved by the National Assembly, was structured this way: Capital Expenditure at N9.9 trillion; Recurrent Expenditure at N8.7 trillion; Debt Service at N8.2 trillion; Statutory Transfers at N1.7 trillion; Oil price benchmark at $77.96/barrel; Oil production rate at 1.78 million barrels per day; Exchange rate at N800 to a US dollar; Forecast GDP growth at 3.88 %.

    From the airport, straight to his desk, the President performed one of the most significant duties of his administration, signing of his first annual budget. It became even more significant for him to have done so on a day he was meant to be enjoying holiday, the first day of the year. While signing the document, he gave an indication of what he intends to do with what he called Renewed Hope Budget. It was in his intent to see that the budget is implemented because that is when it will have a meaning in the life of the country and its people.

    Read Also: Jagaban says ‘educated population’is Nigeria’s newest selling point

    “I cannot conclude my remark without saying that a budget is only as good as its implementation. We will implement this. I want to assure Nigerians that all the MDAs and our teams have been warned, that’s why we even take our time to separate Economic Planning from Finance. MDAs must have regular reports of the budgetary performance in the area that we put in place to help ordinary Nigerians. The goal is to promote efficiency, dedication, and accountability. If you cannot do that, you may have to leave us to do the job on your behalf.

    “All MDA’s have been directed to take responsibility and provide monthly Budget Performance Reports to the Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning, which in turn shall ensure the veracity of such. The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy shall hold regular reviews with the Economic Management Team and, in addition, I shall Chair periodic Economic Coordination Council meetings”, he said.

    Just a day before the President signed the budget, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Abbas, had given an insight into what the character of the budget would be. Abbas who was at the President’s Lagos home to pay homage, said the 2024 Appropriation Act would define Tinubu administration as people-centric. Remember that Jagaban himself has left no one in doubt about his passion for the ordinary people. I know you will remember the refrain; “let the poor breathe”, which has become so popular, it became one of the most favourite quotes of the President that Nigerians always reference.

    “We expect the budget to deliver because there’s no sector that we did not  cross-check, scrutinize and make enquiries as to what is required to make the desired impact to the economy and to the people. I assure you that by the time the 2024 appropriation is signed into law, and we start implementing it, Nigerians will see the difference. This is a budget that is going to define the Tinubu administration’s commitment to the people of this country”, he Abbas had said.

    However, there are Nigerians who have expressed some reservations on the new budget, especially because it did not take long after its passage that it got the President’s signature. They were of the opinion that the executive did not do due diligence on what the National Assembly returned to them. But the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Senator Atiku Bagudu, deflated that, saying the process was seamless this time around because all those involved in the process, from the President down the line, were experienced in the process.

    “There’s nothing like in a hurry. This shows that people are on their toes. Mr. President had experience as a member of the National Assembly, he had the experience as a state governor and then luckily for us as a country, now he’s sitting atop the affairs as the President. Equally, many members of his team; the Vice President, Chief of Staff, SGF, many ministers, the First Lady of the Federation, so there has been a buildup of relationship between the National Assembly… as it ought to be.

     “The oversight is respected, we welcome interrogation, he said so publicly. So even before the budget process started full-stream, there was good understanding about what the challenges are, what the priorities are, and therefore it’s easy to come to conclusion as to what we should do, and that’s what we have done”, Bagudu explained.

    Like reflected earlier, the activities during the week were scanty, after the New Year message and the signing of the budget, but those that occurred, were still very impactful. For instance, Thursday was dedicated to visitors, state governors in particular, and all of them seemed directed at a particular agenda; agriculture, dry season farming and the total subject of food sufficiency and security.

    The governors of Gombe, Jigawa and Niger states; Inuwa Yahaya, Umar Namadi and Umar Bago, all called at the Villa to meet with the President individually and when they came out, each at his time, the story was the same; federal government’s dry season farming and the President’s 500,000 hectares of farmland target.

    On Friday, besides going out of the Villa to attend the Juma’a Service, he met at the Villa with some security chiefs, including the Minister of State for Defense, Bello Matawalle and the National Security Adviser (NSA), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, during a rank decoration ceremony for the PAF Commander, Air Commodore Olayinka Olusola Oyesola, with his new rank of Air Vice Marshal in the Nigerian Air Force; Commander, BoG, Adebisi Olusegun Onasanya, who is promoted from Colonel to the rank of Brigadier-General; and the Police CPSO, Usman Musa Shugaba, who is now a Deputy Commissioner of Police after being promoted from his prior rank of Assistant Commissioner of Police.

    We enter the year’s second week today and most activities should start picking up from now on. We will, as usual, have to wait to the it all unfold in the course of the week. Stay with me.

  • Power production and elite delinquency

    Power production and elite delinquency

    (A review of Odion-Akhaine’s Political Power in Nigeria –Excerpts)

    By the turn of the sixties, Frantz Fanon, the Martinique-born psychiatrist and social theorist, had noted that the new African elite were afflicted by terminal weariness and historical disorientation. It is a condition that has taken on perplexing aggravations. By beaming his formidable intellectual lens on the vexed issue of regime-change at a particularly tense and fraught conjuncture in Nigeria’s post-military evolution, the author has opened up the topic for discussion and further scholarly dissection.

    It is in this respect that this book, emanating from a collection of the author’s column written on the topic for The Guardian newspaper, is an important and critical contribution to the emerging literature on the politics of succession in post-independence Africa, particularly its Nigerian dimension

     Sylvester Akhaine-Odion writes with the quiet and understated authority of personal suffering. An intellectually alert professor of Political Science and committed patriot, he was the Secretary General of the defunct Campaign for Democracy in Nigeria during the murkiest and most tragic political transition programme that the country has ever witnessed.

      As General Babangida’s political chicanery gave way to Abacha’s frank and brutal despotism, Akhaine-Odion himself, for his pains, was impounded and kept away in detention in horrid circumstances. But he has kept faith with his beloved country, successfully transiting from the urban political warfare of civil protests to the equally punitive gymnasium of academic exertions.

      The passion for his country, his faith in the immanent destiny of the troubled giant and his sustained intellectual engagement shine forth in this collection of essays, particularly in their tone and tenor. But they are not enough to redeem the collection from a certain structural levity or what can be more forthrightly described as an organic incoherence of organization.

      There was always going to be a problem in trying to graft a unifying theme on what is essentially a loose collection of random reflections. The situation is rendered all the more desperate and precarious when it is obvious that Akhaine-Odion is writing on the hoof in a manner of speaking, that is trying to make sense of events as they unfolded, giving the impression that serious column writing cannot be anything other than scholarship in a hurry.

      In the circumstances, the most charitable and profitable thing to do is to engage this collection of articles on their own terms and terrain, without ignoring the conceptual lapses and theoretical lacunae brought about mainly by trying capture a historical phenomenon still unfolding. According to the author:

    “The first point of analysis is to look at the power perspective to understanding Nigerian politics in the context of the preponderance of pollster projections ahead of the 2023 general elections.”

      As this passage indicates, and rightly so, it is all a question of power. Power is the principal organizing mode of all societies since the dawn of human civilization. Power is the capacity to enforce compliance or ensure submission without necessarily resorting to physical force.

     The production of power is the ability among owners and wielders of power to create conditions for its own reproduction down the line. This is what allows power to be transferred from generation to generation and within dominant groups as it happens in larger entities, societies, guilds, peoples and nations. This continues until there is a signal rupture in the production of power chain and the falcon no longer hearkens to the falconer. The old order crumbles.

      Sometimes, the end comes with a shuddering and apocalyptic halt which takes many by surprise. More often than not, it is a final whimper after a series of disruptions which often appear unconnected and uncoordinated reminiscent of the multiple wounds which finally put paid to the Roman Empire.

     The capacity for brutal exertions often of a violent physical nature over dominated entities is a sine qua non for the perpetuation of hegemony by dominant factions. This is particularly so in multi-ethnic nations in which mutually unintelligible people of diverse and occasionally countervailing cultures are boxed together by exploitative colonial necessity and its cruel political economy.

      Quoting Odia Ofeimun, the notable Nigerian poet and political activist with warm approval, Odion-Akhaine concurs that the Lugardian Architecture of the colonial state foisted on modern Nigeria by the departing  colonial masters is “a sacral writ which requires power to reside only where the colonial mandate wanted it to be or in favour of British exploitation”.

      Despite its fascinating allure for Nigerian intellectuals, activists and political theorists alike as a theory of power domestication, there is nothing strange or unique about the “Lugardian Architecture of the colonial state in Nigeria”. You cannot give what you don’t have.

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      As it has happened almost everywhere else and in consonance with their own history, the British colonial masters sought for a master-nationality around which the new nation could cohere and congeal even as it facilitated the real business of economic exploitation in favour of the metropolitan centre.

     This was what happened in Kenya with its Kikuyu master-nationality and in virtually all of their colonial franchises everywhere else. Where it has failed, it was because the local elite were considerably unified, cohesive and acutely alert to their historical responsibility. This was the case with Kwame Nkrumah’s Ghana.

      As long as this fundamental impulse and impetus of the imperialist mission is not disturbed, the natives can get on with the business of sorting themselves out often in bloody confrontations which leave death and utter destruction in their wake. Colonization is not a tea party or a benign adventure on behalf of humanity despite the civilizing razzmatazz.

      In his second and third installment about what he termed as the receptacle of power or the warehouse of power, Akhaine is on surer ground when he brings in the concept of the state-nation as an analytic category for capturing the production and distribution of power in the Nigerian postcolonial dominion.

       He quotes himself and quite rightly too: “State-bearing nation refers to the strategic control of state institutions by a nationality , not necessarily dominant  demographically in a plural society, but capable of dictating the content and direction of state policies.”    

    The difference between the nation-state proper and its state-nation simulations is that whereas in nation-states, national institutions evolve alongside state paraphernalia with forces of civil and political society acting in concert to modulate and moderate the excesses of the state, in state-nations, the nation owes its life and continued existence to the state which often act to impede or stall its democratic aspirations. 

    The colonial conquest of Africa and the subjugation of its people was not an act of friendly persuasion. Force—sheer minatory violence—was the organizing principle. Unlike what obtained in the Westphalia nation-state in which the military acted at the behest of the nation, it was the army that founded and owned the colonial nation. All the subsequent anomalies that have hobbled Nigeria’s march to organic nationhood can be traced to this fundamental aberration.

    The litany of colonially induced woes is quiet extensive and benumbing. Odion-Akhaine dredges them up with painstaking assiduity. They include rigged census, rigged elections, rigged recruitment into the armed forces and political organizations to ensure the northern veto and the manipulation of religious and cultural fault lines.

      Odion-Akhaine writes with persuasive force and unimpeachable logic about the nation-disabling antics of the colonial masters. According to him: “Statecraft trumped nation-building. The former is about central control, while the latter is about bridging, merging, and realigning the identity forces, normalizing them, and ensuring the inclusivity of the component nationalities of the Nigerian state. Instead, the Lugardian Achitecture ensured that policies were mainstreamed to ensure the domination of the northern elite.”

      This was the poisoned chalice the departing colonial masters handed down to the Nigerian elite in the guise of a new nation. Yet it ought to be obvious that without elite reorientation and the re-engineering of political ethos leading to a new national consensus about the immanent destiny of the greatest conglomeration of Black people anybody thinking that peace, stability and genuine liberal democracy would follow must be living in a fool’s paradise.

      As we have said many times, Nigeria is structurally rigged against rationality and peaceful order. The state is at war with the nation, and the nation is at war with itself. The colonial terror machine bequeathed to the nation is an impersonal, equal opportunity terminator which does not recognize anybody except its extant handlers.

    Any wonder, then, that after the series of coups, civil wars, mutinies, social and religious upheavals and the summary annulment of the freest and fairest presidential election in its post-independence history by a military cabal and its oligarchic enablers, Nigeria again almost suffered a fatal implosion in the last presidential election?

     Nigeria is like a serial political gambler whose luck has continued to hold. But it should be obvious to the discerning observer that this legendary reprieve cannot go on forever unless the critical issues are critically addressed.

      Many critics believe that this is a crisis of democratic succession rather than a crisis of fundamental state impairment. They cite mundane ephemerality such as the “Emilokan” Syndrome as famously propounded by the leading candidate who is now the president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

      Yet it should be obvious that the “Emilokan” outburst was itself a mere symptom of an underlying serious ailment. Given the legendary capacity of the Nigerian political class for mischief and haymaking, it is a miracle that the political reapproachment and elite consensus which underwrites the post-military dispensation beginning with the Obasanjo civilian regime has lasted for twenty four years before it began to show signs of terminal weariness or the need for repacting.

      Even then, it was not for want of spirited attempts to undermine it. In 1999 despite the prevailing atmosphere of conciliation and compromise after the tragedy of June 12 and Abiola’s demise, there were still some rogue elements of the Nigerian political class who insisted on exercising their fundamental human rights by contesting both the PDP primary and presidential election itself.

       By 2003 when he began contesting for the presidency in a serial losing run which lasted till 2015 when he finally won the laurel, General Mohammadu Buhari exhibited an unwavering disdain for elite consensus.

      Inside the PDP nest of intrigues itself, it is a well-known fact that President Obasanjo barely survived the spirited efforts of  Abubakar Atiku, the Vice President, to unhorse him. Having survived the scare, Obasanjo himself went on to attempt a tinkering with the constitution in a doomed Third Term bid.

      By 2023, the wheels finally began to fall off the clattering locomotive of elite consensus. This was against the backdrop of certain ominous developments in the polity. There was the Sharia gambit of 2001 which suggested that the core north was very uncomfortable with losing power and was bent on doing something about it.

    There was the Boko Haram religious insurrection which began as a local discontent only to snowball into a regional conflagration.  The east became a hotbed of separatist agitation even as flashes of economic sabotage persisted in the Delta.

     As growing insecurity and the menace of Fulani herdsmen began to undermine the peace and security hitherto enjoyed by the region, the old west and its radical intelligentsia began to champion the cause of negotiated separation or some drastic reconfiguration of the extant unitary structure of the country bequeathed by the feudal/military complex.

      It was against this background of the polarization of the nation and the return of the National Question in a sharply accentuated form that the game of thrones of 2023 opened. Under General Mohammadu Buhari’s watch, the old north appeared to be in danger of losing its fabled and much rhapsodized  magical touch and the power of ethnic cum religious veto with which it has railroaded the rest of the country into electoral compliance.

      Two significant developments in the polity showcased the scary possibilities of a looming electoral debacle. First the PDP, panicked by the possibility of becoming a permanent opposition party, opened up its presidential sweepstakes to all comers in flagrant contravention of the founding clause of the party which stipulated that power must be rotated between the north and the south.

       In similar manner, and not wanting to become a sitting electoral duck, the ruling APC opted for a same-faith ticket in open defiance of an unwritten clause that has operated throughout the post-military Fourth Republic, thus igniting a ruckus of discontent in several sectors of the country, particularly among northern minority Christian groups who felt betrayed and even persecuted by the arrangement.

      To complete the millennial meltdown, Peter Obi, sensing an electoral shellacking by Atiku, his former boss and running mate, suddenly decamped from the PDP only to show up in the supposedly leftward leaning Labour Party, a party for which he had never shown any ideological affinity or political consanguinity. The stage was thus set for a political duel unto death without any higher political ideals or ideological and moral probity.

       It is intellectually rich and a grim misapplication of the Biblical code to assign any higher morality to the decision of the group of northern governors to support Bola Ahmed Tinubu in their party presidential primary after General Buhari put his boot in against Tinubu’s aspiration on the floor of the party primary. It was borne out of grim survivalist calculation and a brave attempt to stem the tide of electoral anarchy which would have put paid to the Fourth Republic.

       General Buhari’s aloof contempt for conciliation had become legendary. To the more discerning among his younger gubernatorial colleagues, he had become a political liability to both party and nation at that point in time.

     To do his bidding would have been tantamount to signing a collective death warrant. In a strange drama of political self-abnegation, he himself had acquiesced to being summarily put to the sword even before the ink had dried on his presidential proclamation.

       If it were not for the pained grimace of stupefaction the former infantry officer wore that long night and the hint of surly distaste for what was unfolding, one could have thought that a master political illusionist was putting on a major show.

       In such circumstances, it is the presidential candidate with the least baggage who was bound to prevail. In a stunning dispersal of electoral fortunes and forcible redrawing of map similar only to what can be described as the interpellation of forces in politics, no candidate had been able to impose his might on the populace.

      Such was the cliffhanger that electoral upsets were recorded in strange and unfamiliar places. But by the same token, those who were hoping for a major disruption or an electoral deadlock which would have put paid to the system eventuating in an extra-constitutional interim government could not muster enough votes to achieve their anti-democratic agenda.

      The presidential election of 2023 represents a watershed in Nigeria’s electoral evolution. With the apparent breakdown of the old elite consensus giving way to a new multi-plurality of voices, the hitherto centralized monolithic production of power yielded to a multi-valence and micro-pluralism of power vectors. In the process, an emerging national consciousness , quaint and conservative in nature and orientation, has suffered a drastic pushback.

       This may well be the greatest achievement of the ethnic cum religious cum social combustion known as the “obedient movement”. But in a great irony the greatest beneficiary of the obedient commotion has been the current administration. The post-commotion quietude has allowed the Tinubu regime to strike out in its own peculiar and idiosyncratic manner without the fear of any hegemonic bugbear chafing and snapping at its heel.

       If the administration maintains its calm despite the possibility of a fearsome backlash from the outraged and outfoxed forces of the old order, we may be witnessing the crystallization of a new elite consensus. One thing we can reestablish from the last election is the fact that it is impossible to gain electoral ascendancy in a vast and chaotic ensemble like Nigeria without substantial elite compliance.

       This is the lesson the core Buharists learnt in 2011 after the resort of their rabble to carnage and destruction. It is the lesson other groups aiming to rule Nigeria must now take to heart. Even a revolutionary reconfiguration of the nation under the current template can only come from elite consensus. In attempting an intellectual excavation of his country in a testy moment of electoral disquiet, Sylvester Odion-Akhaine has carried out a yeoman’s assignment. He ought to be commended.  

  • SNAPSONG   205  

    SNAPSONG   205  

    No ‘message songs’, please

    (Lest you lose the ‘cross-over appeal’)

    They kicked The Minstrels out of the studio/market

    Because all they had were “message songs”;

    Message sad sweet and so relentlessly soulful

    But which told the kind of Truth

    The masters were loath to hear

    Too black in sound and sense

    And far too blunt for those coached to sing

    And dance and leave their brains at home

    No damned slave songs, no sorrow strains

    No Strange Fruit blues

    No finger-pointing ooohs and aaahs

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    Just happy Negro beats, black and gratefully simple

    Tired of Memory’s millstone

    Our necks shrink beneath our heads

    There are just so many deeds of our glorious past

    That all good people must just forget

    Forgive, then forget

    The Good Book is sound and strict on that

    The enslaved and the enslaver alike

    Must practice the good old art of Dis-remembrance

    No ‘message song’, please

    No blame game and its politics of penance

    We want you to sing, not to sigh

    Your cross over fate resides in absolute complance

  • Options before Gov Aiyedatiwa

    Options before Gov Aiyedatiwa

    The death of Ondo State’s Governor Rotimi Akeredolu last Wednesday has created nightmarish scenarios for politicians in the state. The worst hit are those interested in contesting next year’s governorship election. The least hit is probably the new governor, Lucky Aiyedatiwa, whose supporters had earlier wanted him to be declared acting governor, if not outright governor, on the grounds of Mr Akeredolu’s incapacitation. A little over two weeks ago the new governor was declared acting governor, a position he had hankered after to the annoyance of those who empathised with the ailing former governor. Supposing that the former governor was probably going to be bedfast for many more months, and perhaps until well into 2024, the new governor needed the acting governor position to strengthen his hands in the coming electoral contest. The other aspirants, on the other hand, needed the former governor alive, or even better, back in office, to help create a level playing field for all the contestants. Mr Akeredolu’s death and Mr Aiyedatiwa’s ascendancy will, therefore, tax the ingenuity of Ondo’s governorship aspirants in ways they had despaired to countenance.

    Clips after video clips have emerged showing how enamoured of Mr Aiyedatiwa the former governor was. He eulogised him as his potential successor, and with folkloric ease lauded his deputy’s name as pregnant with meanings and spiritual import. The new governor, who was then deputy governor, eagerly lapped up the praise. But in a few crazy months, perhaps a reflection of the delicate character of Mr Aiyedatiwa, the sickness of the former governor triggered something unwholesome and unsavoury in him. He was impatient, believed to be unfeeling, unscrupulous, and politically unskillful. He was unable to show convincing proof that he empathised with the debilitated former governor, and in statement after statement, and one action after another, he fumbled into deeper ethical quandary, while his men secretly advocated the remorseless application of the constitution. Eventually, the constitution was applied; and to the relief of Mr Aiyedatiwa, even before he finished savouring that little triumph, the former governor passed away, leaving the coast clear.

    Whether anybody likes it or not, Mr Aiyedatiwa is now governor. He is expected to show his mettle and demonstrate whether he has the character and intuition to govern the state. His lack of surefootedness had divided the state and immersed it in needless controversy as the former governor battled prostate cancer; he will now be called upon to heal the wounds of division, refute allegations of his perfidy and insensitivity, and pursue his 2024 governorship ambition in ways that are not offensive, desperate and egotistic. Given his antecedents, this is a tall order. But as this column indicated last week, he must simply rise above the mediocrity he seemed accustomed to, and surround himself with exemplary characters and advisers who will either help to mould him anew or at least chaperon him into playing a leadership role that seems at first glance bigger than him. Many leading political figures in the state view him with an eerie wariness, and the ruling party in the state, the All Progressives Congress (APC), can’t find the equanimity and the resolve to trust him. How he transcends those divisions and dissipates the distrust in which he is held will go a long way in demonstrating whether he can pleasantly surprise those casting furtive glances at his unorthodox politics. 

    A few resignations by the late governor’s aides and at least one commissioner have attempted to take the shine off Mr Aiyedatiwa’s ascendancy. The resignations were neither insulting nor tied to anything the governor did or didn’t do; but the undertones were clear. They will, however, not have the force or amplitude of the resignations that plagued the political manoeuvres of the Rivers State governor, Siminalayi Fubara. In Rivers where the governor attempted to assert himself against his allegedly overbearing godfather, the governor took extra-constitutional steps to arrest the impeachment moves against him. Even then, the resignations were dismissed as the exaggerated actions of pampered and prejudiced appointees. In Ondo, despite the governor’s machinations, he had the constitution on his side through and through. No resignation, even if it involved every appointee of the former governor, would raise eyebrows. If they did not resign, the new governor would be at liberty, the constitution firmly on his side, to reshuffle the executive council and retain those he can trust. One of the Ondo resignees had spoken touchingly and in sepulchral tones of his loyalty to the late governor, but even if necromancy had the force of law, Mr Akeredolu could not be a living godfather in the grave. In Ondo, an era has passed; it remains to be seen what kind of moral and political tapestry the new governor would weave for the new era.

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    In the months ahead, as the state braces for the next governorship primaries and election, Mr Aiyedatiwa will have a lot of policy issues and administrative obstacles to contend with. President Bola Tinubu and the APC party leadership in Abuja have charged him to unite the party and deal with Ondo wisely as well as offer the state excellent leadership that delivers the dividends of democracy. It is unclear how he will proceed in those onerous tasks, for the months ahead will be taken up almost wholly by the politics of next year’s governorship election rather than the task of development. The governor has managed, perhaps not intentionally, to set the cat among the pigeons by his open desperation to succeed his former boss. What no one can tell immediately is whether enough functionaries in the party and the state’s elite have been offended by his clamorousness. Yet if the temperament of Nigerian politics is taken into cognisance, the governor may by patronage and guile, and perhaps a little dose of ruthlessness, draw a significant number of important people into his camp, enough to tilt the scale against other governorship contenders. For a man and politician who only needed to bide his time early in Mr Akeredolu’s battle with cancer, but chose to go for broke, could he be trusted to produce the guile and wisdom needed to gain the upper hand in the contest for the minds of the electorate?

    As governor, Mr Aiyedatiwa occupies a vantage position in the coming battle. But his co-contenders, some four or five of them, have also put their hands to the plough and will not be inclined to look back. Some of them have some measure of support in Abuja; they will give the governor a run for his money, and match him battleground for battleground, and naira for naira. All contenders will try their best and worst to seduce the national leadership of the party and buy the local party chapter. Whether they succeed will depend on the cheapness or expensiveness of the consciences being bought. What is clear is that there will be some sort of trading, far worse than horse-trading. The flip side is whether Ondo’s political personalities who chafed at Mr Aiyedatiwa’s methods are scandalised enough to double down on their intransigent view of the new governor’s duplicity. Should a critical mass of political leaders in the state remain attached to the moral argument against the governor, they will be loth to put him in the State House knowing full well that once in power, he could transmogrify into something nastier than he exhibited during the former governor’s sickness. They could, however, also wonder whether it would not make more sense to put their own APC monster in office, assuming that description fits, than put a hostile and unamenable lamb from the opposition PDP in office.Human memory can, however, be fickle. Mr Aiyedatiwa may not have been exemplary during Mr Akeredolu’s sickness, but if he can begin to conciliate his opponents, massage the egos of the state chapter of the APC, persuade and retain as commissioners some appointees of his predecessor, and begin to make high-sounding and lofty moral statements, even if untrue, the party and the electorate could begin to doubt their own judgements and conclusions about him. He has less than a year to make a great impression on Ondo in terms of projects and bribes; but with barely four months to the governorship primary and 10 months to the election, the state has become an excruciatingly tight and labyrinthine maze only a wise ruler can navigate successfully. Perhaps he is incapable of pulling a rabbit from the hat or demonstrating that he has any wisdom left in his repository. Should he do the unimaginable in appealing to the party and the people, they will forget his dark side, excuse his domestic troubles gingerly alluded to in Akure’s beer parlour gossips as nothing extraordinarily different from his predecessor’s termagant better half, and even begin to defend his idiosyncratic impatience as customary of leaders everywhere.

    Mr Aiyedatiwa has now become lucky, as his first name suggests. He replaced the luckless Agboola Ajayi as deputy governor, and almost from the outset his mentor touted him as a worthy and favoured successor. But at his swearing-in, where he made a deplorable Freudian slip about the state heaving a sigh of relief, his supporters ululated in triumph and booed his opponents. It was an incredibly churlish display indicative of the unbridgeable divisions in the party and government. There were only a few Akeredolu men in the hall where he was sworn in; most stayed away. If his supporters’ attitude to his opponents is a reflection of his conviction, then the APC in Ondo State may be headed for a turbulent and acrimonious time. APC leaders in Abuja will be anxious to avoid turmoil in the state; they must hope that the governor will be on the same page with them. Both the party and the governor need that miracle; for while the party is not yet tuned to operate at an exquisitely efficient and calculating level, Mr Aiyedatiwa seems even less inclined to political panache or discreteness. Whatever happens, the next few months in Ondo will engender a titanic battle between the governor and other governorship aspirants who are undeterred and unfazed by his office, power or money.

  • A wayward year on the final approach

    A wayward year on the final approach

    As this year eases itself out of contention in a matter of hours, many Nigerians will breathe a sigh of relief. It was a year that delivered much more than it promised. A year full of awkward surprises and telling political ambushes, it even managed to collect some significant political scalps on the homeward stretch.

     It was the year of magical paradoxes. The person who won the presidential election was not the person who won the most votes. But he was widely seen as the person with the least political baggage, the one with the best capacity transcend the yawning chasm and ever widening geyre thrown up by the unresolved aspects of the National Question. 

    It was the year when the brittle pact among the elite which held the country precariously together for twenty five years since military departure finally collapsed. For the first time since 1966, a significant fraction of the political elite opted for political disruption as a way of resolving the political logjam.

      A former head of state took to the tube urging for an immediate cancellation of the election on the ground of widespread irregularities. But the midnight black market intervention felt more like a signal for the termination of democracy rather than its protection. Political discontent simmers in some quarters.

      In many other African countries where this collapse of elite conciliation has occurred, it has led to civil war or unusually violent political commotion. Sudan has not had a functioning state in the last eighteen months. But Nigeria’s legendary luck has kept it staggering about like a badly wounded elephant and with its capacity to function as a normal state seriously impaired.

      In more than one  respect, this outgoing year will be remembered as the most significant and consequential since the military returned to the barracks. This is the year Nigeria’s traditional power merchants finally lost the plot. Emerging political contradictions surprised them and rendered them combat-ineffective. Political proxies and satraps they have always relied upon to fight their battle for them developed ideas of their own. The power baron is dead, long live the power baron.

     Unfortunately but not unexpectedly, this was also the year the Nigerian economy finally tanked after decades of serial abuse and horrendous mismanagement which qualifies for a new word in the history of state aggression against its own people and corporate larceny: econocide: the deliberate killing of a nation and its people through systematic plunder of its resources by a wayward political elite.

      Forget about Mobutu, Eyadema, Bongo, Mugabe, Mansa Musa, Bokassa and all of them put together. Nigeria is the most openly stolen and looted country in the history of humanity. If the reports of humongous stealing from the federal coffers and outlandish pilfering are anything to go by, it has been a bazaar of barracudas.

      No human society has ever survived this level of stealing without some significant consequences. Even the feudal mode of production in its classical formation was better organized and far more humane. Yet we claim to be a nation-state which is supposed to be a historical advance on the feudal vision of human society. But the fan has now hit the ceiling of putrescence.

       There is an organic connection between the collapse of elite amity and the virtual collapse of the Nigerian economy. Those who are organically incapable of self-development cannot be expected to organize and develop a nation’s economy. They are at the dead end of political economy. Much is consumed as if there is no tomorrow and little is produced.

      A feudal national elite that has developed a sweet tooth and the habit of cosmopolitan consumption without corresponding hard work cannot grow any economy. They are like a pack of gluttonous rodents who happened upon a sugarcane plantation. They will feed themselves into a state of drunken stupor until reprieve comes from the cutlass of the bemused hunter.

     This last Friday, one had wandered into an upmarket Bureau de Change in Canary Wharf in London just to have an inkling of how the transactions in international currencies were proceeding. Of course, Nigeria and its naira had long been expelled from this global currency community because the naira had lost its viability as a convertible currency.

    To our shame, all the African currencies on display, particularly the Uganda shilling and its Kenyan counterpart, were holding out very well with the Kenyan currency trading at 217 to the pound sterling. At that point in time, the black market rate of the naira was 1650 to the pound sterling and still counting.  The question is what is Kenya producing and exporting that we are not? Are we not dealing with the same prototype of fractious political elite?

       The key to unlocking the question lies in firm, committed and disciplined leadership. If the massive anger and discontent were not to tip over, if Nigeria were to avoid the terrible fate of the sugarcane plantation rodents, it will require a stern lawgiver; a brutally self-disciplined leader who will show by example that it is no longer business as usual and that he is not hostage to any corrupt elite formation with a feudal sense of entitlement. This is what has brought Nigeria to the gate of economic and political ruination.

     It has been said that President Tinubu’s civilized approach and his behind the door arm twisting, cajoling and entreaties may be bearing huge fruits beyond the glare of public klieg lights. There are unsubstantiated reports that stolen money and huge repatriations from criminal looting of the exchequer may be finding their way back to the federal coffer.

      This is just as it should be. But it is not nearly enough. Private deal for public looting is a vision of human society which lacks the basic components of social justice and compassion for the economically abused and dehumanized.

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    Even if the lesser crooks are allowed to go with a slap on the wrist, such benign dismissals must never be contemplated for the major scoundrels who have brought this country to the nadir of its fortunes. Examples will have to be made of the major crooks whose thieving shenanigans have contributed greatly to the economic adversity of the nation. 

     At this juncture in our nation’s history, it is important to lay down the cult of integrity and propriety in public office to serve as an example to coming generations. In the whirlpool of irrational stealing, nothing much can be achieved until we lay the foundation of bureaucratic rigour and modern rationality in this country. As the English put it: men are hanged not because horses are stolen but so that horses may not be stolen.

       As a student of the dialectics of history and a believer in the immanent rationality that drives the conduct of human affairs despite the wayward twists and turns of actual events, one cannot but ease off this year on a note of optimism.

      It is time for honourable dreaming. Just as historical developments and the reality of a multi-ethnic nation rumbling with volcanic possibilities made continued military rule an unprofitable venture for its most ardent champions, and just as political contradictions have weakened the vice grip of the old ruling class on the nation, the prevalent political gangsterism will also become a thing of the past as its ethical and political toll becomes very prohibitive. Welcome 2024.