Tag: Coup

  • 1985 coup: Dasuki denies arresting Buhari

    1985 coup: Dasuki denies arresting Buhari

    Embattled former National Security Adviser Sambo Dasuki has denied arresting President Muhammadu Buhari, shortly after he was overthrown as a Military Head of State in August 1985.

    He also said he had supported Buhari’s presidential aspiration in 2003, 2007 and 2011.

    He said he knelt down in 2011 for the former National Chairman of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Chief Bisi Akande, to make Buhari a joint candidate of the ACN and the defunct Congress of Peoples Congress (CPC).

    Col. Dasuki made the clarifications in an interview during an encounter with a blogger and the Publisher of the Economic Confidential, Mr. Yushau Shuaib.

    The piece is titled: “Sambo Dasuki: An Encounter with the spymaster”.

    He spoke against the backdrop of insinuations that his house arrest might have to do with a retaliation of a similar maltreatment against Buhari in 1985.

    The ex-NSA also spoke against the backdrop that he attempted to truncate the election of President Muhammadu Buhari in March and inauguration on May 29.

    In the extracts of the encounter between the two, Dasuki said: “I always respect and dignify my seniors and those in positions of authority, whether in service or after. Though as a young officer, I was reluctant to be among those that arrested him. And I was not.

    “I only met him afterward at Bonny Camp with Lawal Rafindadi. There is no way I could have maltreated him as being alleged in some quarters. I am glad most of the actors are still alive.”

    On the December 1983 coup d’etat, Dasuki admitted that he and two young military officers (who are still alive) ‘travelled to Jos to brief Major General Buhari, who was then the GOC of 3rd Armoured Division on the furtherance of the planning of the 1983 coup which made Buhari the major beneficiary of the ouster of the elected President Shehu Shagari.’

    The journalist added: “He even told me how Buhari expressed his bitterness about insinuations on his stewardship in one of the public institutions. Dasuki assured the then GOC not to worry about such reckless and mischievous insinuations.

    I asked why he participated in the ouster of Buhari just less than two years afterward. He simply answered that General Buhari should know whom he should blame.”

    Asked why he participated in the ouster of Buhari just less than two years afterward, Dasuki simply answered that “General Buhari should know whom he should blame.”

    He said he had been part of Buhari’s presidential aspiration in 2003, 2007 and 2011.

    He said Nigerians could verify from respected Northerners, such as Adamu Adamu, Bashir Kurfi, Wada Maida, Sule Hamman and Kabir Yusuf among others.

    The journalist added: “The major shocker for me in his narratives was his campaign for Buhari to emerge the joint candidate of ACN and CPC in 2011. He disclosed how he pleaded with Asiwaju Ahmed Tinubu in the presence of Bisi Akande to accept Muhammad Buhari as the joint presidential candidate for ACN and CPC.

    “Dasuki stated that he knelt down, begging ‘Baba Bisi Akande’ who was then the National Chairman of ACN that ‘General Buhari is a man to be trusted’.

    “In their belief that Yoruba and South Westerners are never religious fanatics especially regarding politics, Dasuki and his group suggested that Tinubu should be a running mate to Buhari.

    “When other elements opposed that proposition, Tinubu team therefore recommended a Buhari-Osinbajo ticket. Unfortunately, the ticket failed to stick as Pastor Tunde Bakare was eventually pushed forward by other forces.”

    Prof. Yemi Osinbajo was later to be Buhari’s running mate in 2015 and the nation’s current Vice President.

    On the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, which was won by the late Chief M.K.O. Abiola, Dasuki said he was one of those who confronted the late Head of State, Gen. Sani Abacha.

    The journalist said: “Dasuki told me the story of how he and some others confronted late Gen. Sani Abacha over June 12 election which was won by Chief Moshood Kashimawo Abiola (MKO). This led to their premature retirement.

    “The persecution that followed forced him into exile where he teamed up with opposition elements struggling for the return of democracy in Nigeria.”

  • Alimi coup

    I lorin history speaks of a dynastic coup in the 19th century by Alimi (formerly, Salih Janta), a Fulani Islamic scholar and adviser in the court of Afonja, the Ilorin Yoruba ruler.  Though the religious nomad, Alimi, came to Ilorin with Afonja’s help, when Afonja was assassinated in 1824, Alimi’s son, Abdulsalami, became the first Fulani ruler of the town.

    But many insist — not without fairness — that Afonja got his own comeuppance; because Afonja himself, as the Aare Ona Kakanfo to the Alaafin of Oyo, rebelled against the Alaafin, with Alimi’s help.  So, when Afonja himself was put to Alimi’s sword, it was one treachery cancelling out another.

    Whatever the matter between the two personages, that very act sentenced Ilorin to its neither-nor political geography.  Though it is southernmost enough to be part of Western Nigeria, it is geographically North. Though Ilorin’s dominant culture is ethnic Yoruba, it remains a Fulani suzerainty.

    On June 9, an Alimi-like coup took place in the hallowed chambers of the Senate, in the National Assembly.  The major player in that coup was Bukola Saraki, incidentally an Ilorin indigene and head of the second-generation Oloye political dynasty — the Oloye himself being the senior Saraki, now dead, Dr. Olusola Saraki.

    It was the election of the president for the eighth Senate of the Federal Republic.  Senator Saraki had disagreed with his party, the All Progressives Congress’ (APC’s) official nominee for the position.  But striking a deal with the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) senators, Senator Saraki got 12 of his party’s 59 votes with wholesale bloc votes from the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to nick the Senate presidency with 57 votes.  It was a rebellion so brazen!

    In the aftermath have been emotive responses, charging the Saraki camp with treachery, indiscipline and self-ambition over collective interest — not totally illegitimate or unfair allegations.  Not a few have even linked the Saraki coup to the Alimi coup in 19th century Ilorin, therefore seeking historical justifications to suggest something eternally slimy and treacherous about the Saraki political persona.

    But Saraki’s supporters and sympathisers have countered that what happened was the Tambuwalisation of the Senate; and from the PDP it was simply payback time!  Aminu Tambuwal, former House of Representatives Speaker and now Sokoto governor, became speaker, against PDP’s wish, with the vote of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and Congress for Progressives Change (CPC), both legacy parties now merged into APC.

    But after justification and counter-justification, the APC stakeholders must realise one chilling fact: PDP would be damned to have APC succeed, being the party that ended its 16-year rule.  In PDP’s shoes, APC would probably behave the same way.  It is politics, after all!

    Then, a no less chilling follow-up: with Saraki doing a deal with PDP, APC has a potent enemy in the house.  Why, for instance, would the PDP vote that powered Saraki to the Senate presidency zealously power the APC agenda which, if successful, would forever bury PDP?

    That is why the winners in the APC camp should stop gloating and the losers stop threatening.  APC  was elected to make a definitive change in Nigerians’ lives.  It should shake off this crisis and do exactly just that.

    Nigerians would be the ultimate losers, should this crisis — as major as it is — derail the promises APC enunciated so brilliantly during electioneering, against the background of a hugely disappointing PDP Jonathan presidency.

    APC should activate its internal crisis-resolution mechanism.  Let the bickering stop.  There is work to do for Nigeria — and the task is tough and arduous.

  • Emmanuel’s victory coup against state, says Umana

    •We’ll challenge victory in court

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship candidate in Akwa Ibom State, Umana Okon Umama, has described the victory of Udom Emmanuel, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate as a coup against the people.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) yesterday declared the PDP candidate as the winner of last Saturday’s election in the state.

    According to INEC, Emmanuel scored 996, 071 votes to defeat Umana, who scored 89, 865.

    But speaking to The Nation through telephone, Umana said APC would take steps to seek justice in the interest of the people.

    He said despite the widespread hijack of voting materials across the 31 lcouncils and non-collation, results of the election were announced by INEC.

    “Udom Emmanuel’s declaration is a coup against the people of Akwa Ibom State. So we will take steps to seek justice in the court of law for the people.

    “You are a reporter in Akwa Ibom State. You know we did not have an election. Electoral materials were hijacked everywhere and there was widespread violence.

    “Above all, through out Saturday, did you see collation taking place anywhere? At the local government level, there was no collation.

    “So where are the results coming from? From the houses of people and from Government House. It’s a travesty of justice. It’s a crime against the people. We’ll seek justice in the courts.”

     

  • Jonathan’s coup against Nigeria

    Jonathan’s coup against Nigeria

    While this entire shenanigan was going on, the usually very articulate civil societies in Nigeria saw through it all and knew that the Commander-in-Chief had something up his sleeves.

    They started asking questions: ‘What on earth could have led to the Presidency and the president’s jolly fellows to begin to chicken out in the face of an imminent election? Why should they be falling down one by one when Death was yet to knock on their doors?

    Finally, the Commander-in-Chief struck! The elections would have to be postponed because the Commander-in-Chief had now just gathered his strength to lead an onslaught on Boko Haram now that Chad, Cameroon and Niger had shown what leadership was all about.

    The Commander-in-Chief announcing the coup through his service chiefs says that his forces will be commencing offensive against insurgents the very day the whole of Nigeria and the international community had concluded to hold a most popularised election.By this coup, Jonathan has exposed the underbelly of the Nigerian nation to a most unpardonable ridicule. Never in the over 100-year history of the country have elections been postponed. And it is an irony that Nigeria that used to be the toast of the world in international peace keeping operations and had in fact rescued Liberia, Congo and Sierra-Leone from destruction is now the same country being rescued by land-locked Chad. A greater irony is that the same Security Agents that could not muster forces to quell insurgency in the North East is now battle ready to squash Nigeria’s hopes and aspirations. They cannot fight the insurgents but they can terrorise law abiding Nigerian citizens and prevent them from their basic civic duty of electing their leaders.

    This coup master-minded by the Commander-in-Chief is billed to throw Nigeria back for twenty years. And it may just be the beginning scenario for more coups to unfold from the arm pit of the Commander-in-Chief. The Commander-in-Chief has already deployed his armoured tanks to strategic places in the country. This ferocious step is a confirmation of the fears and suspicions which the Nigerian populace had nursed all along; that the Jonathan government being seriously afraid of its own shadows will truncate the planned elections to ensure the unpopular government remains in power for as long as the Commander-in-Chief is in control of all forces of intimidation, coercion and terror and also to ensure for its beneficiaries an undisturbed flow of illicit money to their bank accounts.

    The coup of February 9 2015 will forever be a date to remember!

    All hail Jonathan, our very smart Commander-in-chief!

  • It’s a coup, says activist

    It’s a coup, says activist

    Kaduna-based human rights lawyer and National Coordinator of Independent Election Monitoring Group (IEMG), Mr. Festus Okoye, has described the postponement of the election as a “coup against democracy”.

    Okoye said IEMG was not convinced and will not accept the postponement of the elections since the reasons given for the said postponement were not cogent and verifiable.

    In a statement in Kaduna yesterday, the constitutional lawyer said: “We view the postponement as unwarranted and a coup against the constitution of and the Nigerian people and therefore unacceptable.

    “We condemn the decision by the security agencies and forces not to provide security for the February elections. The said decision is a coup against democracy, the constitutional order, the electoral process and the Nigerian people.

    “The Independent National Electoral Commission in compliance with section 25 and 30 of the Electoral Act, 2010 (as amended) issued the timeline for the conduct of all the strands of elections provided for in the Constitution. The security agencies did not complain about the dates and did not call for an adjustment of the timelines. They did not oppose the conduct of elections in the Northeast of Nigeria and were taken into confidence as regards voting by Internally Displaced Persons.

    “At every forum, the security agencies assured the Nigerian people that all systems are geared towards the successful conduct of the elections and urged Nigerians not to be cowed by insurgents.

    “It is unfortunate and a constitutional aberration that the security agencies that did not oppose the conduct of elections have decided to kidnap democracy through the illegal abdication of their constitutional and statutory responsibility to provide security for the conduct of elections.

    “It is more shameful that a country like Nigeria can commit so much to an election and get this type of embarrassment. So much resource has been committed to the electoral process. Agencies and organisations have signed contracts and made payments for various services connected with the elections. Domestic and international observers and media have been mobilised. Nigerians have made all sorts of preparations, including mental and emotional preparations. People have made arrangements and some have relocated due to the scare-mongering of a section of the political elite. All these are now in abeyance.

    “We find it difficult to understand why the security agencies decided to blackmail and push the burden of postponement to the electoral management body. The security agencies are aware that the Independent National Electoral Commission (NEC) can only postpone an election under section 26 of the Electoral Act, 2010 (as amended) only on grounds of a likelihood of a serious breach of the peace or natural disasters or other emergencies and these must be cogent and verifiable.

    “It is our opinion that the Electoral Act, 2010 (as amended) has made provision for the isolation of areas of security challenge and a return may not be made for such areas if the quantum of votes will affect the results. So, the use of the Northeast insurgency as bait is only a cheap blackmail to achieve a pre-determined outcome.

    “If the security agencies truly believe that Nigeria is at war and it is impossible to hold elections, they should have accepted responsibility and advised the President and Commander-in-Chief to approach the National Assembly to extend his regime by a period of six months utilising the provisions of section 64(2) of the Constitution, rather than blackmail the electoral management body to achieve a pre-determined result.

    “The added danger in the manipulation of the electoral timelines is that Nigeria may be heading towards a constitutional cul-de-sac. By section 132(2) of the constitution, 1999 (as amended) elections must be held not later than 30 days to the terminal date of the last holder of the office. If the present election is postponed and a second election is to be conducted in accordance with section 134 of the Constitution, it may be next to impossibility to accommodate same within the constitutional framework and this will land Nigeria in an interim government arrangement.

    “We must be careful not to play into the hands of anti-democratic forces that want to abort our democracy. The Nigerian people are advised to remain calm and act within the constitutional order and not give an excuse to those that do not want the elections to hold,” he said.

  • Re: The coup against capital

    Snooper, your co-ethnic saw to it that those of your brethren; made prostrate by military defeat, who showed, and still show the most valour in capital accumulation and husbandry, were rendered destitute. See how far they’ve come from 20 pounds per diem. While we moan about metropolitan capital flight, let us ponder on self-inflicted injuries.

    – Obinnna77

    It is not for lack of trying or the possession of the requisite branial capacity that tempered our tendency for the accumulation of capital. Rather, it was the nature of the traditional economic system that was adopted by some African societies. We were basically an agrarian society. The Yoruba for example adopted the Aro system which was a communalistic form of arrangement in which members of a particular commune took time to work on one another’s farm. This is hardly a system that encourages capital accumulation. Add to this the fact that the legal tender of the Yoruba, for example, was the cowrie shell. It was not enough to accumulate capital, but one must be able to carry same around for business transactions. It thus required men of immense might and main to ferry a million in cowrie shells from one location to another. With the advent of paper money, moving capital was made easy.

    – Rufus O.

    Neither Abacha nor Mobutu, the two avatars in this piece, was a capitalist. We should be asking why the capital formations attempted by Abiola, Iwuanyanwu, Odutola, Dantata, Ojukwu, etc., did not make it to the stock exchange. Or, if they did, why they soon fizzled. We should ask why Adenuga and Dangote watched on the sidelines as Nuhu Ribadu was trashed while he was fighting for the discipline necessary for capital sustenance.

    – Omotaye Omobosede.

    The Zairois and Nigerian political histro-political paths are hardly the same. Nigeria did NOT have a Sergeant Joseph Desire Mobutu in 1966….could NOT have had. We KNOW those who created Mobutu…..the Nigerian HISTORY created an Abacha. Nigeria, even now, is NOT the near-tragedy the Congo has become, the paradox is that the historic fault lines of Nigeria collectively cushion Nigeria from falling into the abyss. Their existence may yet induce Nigeria into a working federalism or it may well be the components will go their separate ways….though that will be a sad commentary on the valiant efforts that have gone to save the union.

    – Oluwole Omotaye Omobosede.

    Yes, sir Congo cannot happen here, reason why the foetus of Abacha tyranny was clinically aborted before it reached maturity, thanks to patriots like WS, late Alao Aka-Bashorun, Barrister Femi Falana, Dr Beko Ransome Kuti, Ndubuisi Kanu, Colonel Abubakar Umar Dangiwa, one Prof A Williams, et al. Legendary luck be damned, there are Nigerians super patriots working round the clock, burning the midnight oil so that this fatherland will actualize its manifest destiny, if it is still standing bloodied but unbowed despite the thousand cuts it has sustained and continues to endure from its traitorous diabolical offspring ,it has nothing to do with luck, it has all to do with the indomitable spirit of its noble patriotic offspring waging titanic battle and war on tactical and strategic level to keep the the soul of this fatherland sacred and noble. As to this question of yours “Is there a historic or genetic conspiracy against capital and its useful accumulation in Africa?”

    I will respond that yes there is a historic conspiracy against capital and its useful accumulation in Africa, after all the thematic focus of colonialism is primitive accumulation of capital through barbaric and primitive exploitation of the colonial subjects and his resources, and when colonialism metamorphosed into imperialism and neo colonialism ,brutal, rapacious and unscrupulous under valuation of neo colonial subjects and his capital(property) became the norm, reason why original inhabitants of Lekki were uprooted from their property ,which was latter upgraded and reevaluated to worth millions, and then parceled out to the neo colonial running dogs, whereas all that was needed to be done was empowered the original owners by given them deeds or C of O to their land and develop the land ,so as to enhance the value, thereby enabling them to use the title to access capital.(for further enumeration sir, I urge you to read the Peruvian economist Herman De Soto on this issue), where are still waiting for what is going to become of Mkoko.

    As for anti Okonjo I aver in the past that she is a Trojan horse, her first time around was as a debt collector for her western masters, and having accomplished that ,she was sent on another errand, that of destroying our fatherland economically, so as to make it regionally politically ineffective and irrelevant ,hence incapacitate it to actualize its manifest destiny, and in the process hand over our sovereign wealth to Goldman Sachs, an accomplice. But Sir, you know what, all this shall pass, we are indomitable, we are exceptional and we shall overcome.

    – Bola Awoniran.

  • The coup against capital

    The coup against capital

    (On the modern ruins of Gbadolite)

    Is there a historic or genetic conspiracy against capital and its useful accumulation in Africa? More than its self-inflicted political and spiritual wounds, the perennial and perpetual inability to accumulate and valorise capital is the festering sore of Africa. Even where there is a fundamental breakthrough, the Mansa Musa syndrome takes over. How many first generation businesses survive far into the next generation? Yet you turn any corner of England and you find tailors since the eighteenth century, florists since the nineteenth, bankers since the seventeenth, clothiers since the nineteenth etc.

    Perhaps the urgency of the situation must permit us to frame the question in a more desperate and despairing manner. Is the Black man’s brains genetically wired against capital accumulation? Or is there something about the societal configuration in Africa and its autochthonous formations which continually resists and rebels against being co-opted into the orbit of untrammelled capitalism? Is this a fall out of the hunter-gatherer phase of human existence or a case of errant but stubborn localism frustrating the forces of capitalist globalization?

    This is not a question of racial inferiority or lack of fundamental ability for capital capacity building and holding. After all, there are successful black entrepreneurs in post-apartheid South Africa and the western world. To be sure, there is nothing pre-ordained or inevitable about the triumph of western modernity and its capitalist mode of production. The west has been able to impose its economic vision on the rest of the world as a result of its military superiority and spiritual ascendancy.

    There were English slaves in the court of the Ottoman emperors. A survey once came up with the startling conclusion that despite the thunder and tinsel of modern capitalism, the golden and happiest period in England was the Elizabethan epoch. The compulsive generosity and willingness to share without looking back in times of plenty that we notice in certain traditional societies speak to some alternative life styles that could have moderated and modulated the traumas of modern capitalism.

    But since Africa has been frogmarched to the frontiers of western modernity, there is nothing anybody can do about that. The problem is that you cannot redistribute wealth that has not been created by labour and human exertion. To do so is to indulge in starry-eyed idealism which is another word for infantile radicalism.

    Let the lore not race ahead of the leitmotif. There are intellectual debts and obligations to be paid and discharged. In a famous essay titled, The Revolution against Capital, Antonio Gramsci, the great Italian journalist, philosopher and outstanding radical theoretician, argued that the Russian Revolution was a revolution against the grain and a social earthquake against the fundamental tenets of Marxism.

    The revolution crashed all the gears of Historical and Dialectical Materialism. The ideal conditions of a burgeoning capitalist state and a rampart proletariat were simply not there. Russia was a backward society, with a rudimentary version of capitalism and an underdeveloped workers class.

    Yet it happened. The Russian Revolution occurred despite the unpropitious circumstances. It was eight days that changed the world. This was due to the sheer ferocious voluntarism and heroism of the Soviet leadership. They had conjured something out of nothing. In effect, it was also a revolution against Das Kapital, Karl Marx’ opus, as Gramsci’s subtle dig would suggest.

    It is arguable that the subsequent tragedy of the Russian people and the revolution itself stems from this fundamental contradiction. But that is neither here nor there. Sometimes, you need barbarity to drive out barbarism, as somebody was to quip. History itself is a horoscope of horror.

    It is useful in passing to say something about this rare gem of an Italian political theorist and outstanding patriot. A mortally afflicted hunchback, Gramsci wrote virtually all his works in the most crippling and inhuman of circumstances. Yet he was unmoved by his personal misfortunes. At a point, he constituted himself into a one man think tank against fascism in Italy. When the Italian authorities finally tired of his intellectual provocations, Mussolini sent him to jail with the war cry: “We must prevent this brain from functioning for twenty years!”

    Unfortunately for Benito Mussolini, you can only imprison the man and not the mind. It was in prison and from horrendous captivity that Gramsci did his most productive and outstanding work. These days when you hear of American tenured professors under the comfort of five-star hotels noisily quarrelling about whether Gramsci was a Marxist or not, you begin to feel sorry for the sheer attenuation of the human spirit.

    This general debility of the soul and attenuation of the human spirit is at its most compelling on the African continent. Here, the revolt against capital and capitalism is on the grand stage and it is unlike any other thing witnessed in the history of mankind. The BBC crew were at their best and most devastating in a recent panoramic survey of the diseased hulk of old Zaire. Nothing can match the modern tragedy of this potentially prosperous country with its infinite natural resources.

    Everything has been laid to waste in a series of wars without a formal front or frontier. The country itself had long regressed into a state of nature with the inhabitants reminding one of the feral denizens of a vast human zoo. For a moment, the camera zeroed in on the ruins of Gbadolite, Mobutu’s birthplace and home to his fabled marble palace. This scandalous eyesore must rank as the greatest indictment of the coup against capital in post-colonial Africa.

    The whole place was in ruins. The airstrip from which Mobutu used to import his barber and daily venison from Paris— that is when he was not gorging on locally grown giant maggots washed down with pink champagne— had been reclaimed by nature and now home to savage reptiles. The palace itself lay in utter ruins with its gold-encrusted Jacuzzis. What cannot be looted had been vandalised, and what cannot be looted and vandalised had been overtaken by desuetude. This is the most compelling evidence of insanity among Africa’s post-colonial leaders.

    In a 31 year career, Mobutu looted and stole his country blind. At a point, the vicious kleptocrat even had the temerity to lend his “personal funds” to the country. Congo is one vast crematorium of wasted capital. If Mobutu had used just a fraction of the capital violently expropriated from the Congolese people to grow education and build factories, the country could have taken off. In the end, Congolese capital returned to metropolitan capitalists who needed it most. It was Mobutu’s greatest coup against the Congo people and Africa.

    As the National Conference unfolds tomorrow, the dire view from the old Zaire must concentrate the minds of Nigerian patriots. The two African giants are often compared. Nigeria’s luck, unlike the Congo, is that it is powered along by a micro-pluralism of countervailing power centres which ensures a negative equilibrium at least. Succeeding military and civilian despots have done their damnable best to upset the delicate apple cart. But divine fate and Nigeria’s legendary luck have always seen them off.

    But Nigerians cannot be complacent about this fabled good luck. Until General Sani Abacha stole them blind even as he culled off their leading lights, many Nigerians believed that the kind of fiscal anarchy and privatised tyranny that characterised Mobutu’s Congo could not happen in Nigeria.

    But just short of five years, aided by modern technology and his contempt for conventional stealing, Abacha almost beat Mobutu in his own game. Yet when he died, there was no evidence that Abacha ever ploughed back a fraction of the money he looted from the treasury into any productive economic venture.

    Apart from his magnificent castle in Kano, Abacha did not leave any viable or visible economic monument. In a historic addendum, the United States only last week dismissed the former Nigerian despot as a vicious kleptocrat while impounding his stashed loot. African capital has returned to metropolitan capitalists with plenty of insults to the bargain.

    In the light of this unending kleptomania among African rulers which has returned the blighted continent to the Stone Age while the rest of the world marches on to new frontiers of civilisation, the original question must now be framed in a more fundamental manner. Is there something wrong about the genetic wiring of Africa’s post-colonial elite?

    In a curious paradox, it is Nigeria which provides the key to unlocking the problem. Whenever a fundamental economic crisis is framed as a political quarrel among squabbling elite, we may be sure that there is a red herring somewhere. Away from the hysterical cat-calls and strident abuses, this is a more productive way of framing the problem of the missing 20 billion naira, the Sanusi ouster and the culture of political and economic impunity on all sides.

    In her first tour of duty as Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, paid off all of Nigeria’s disputable debt in one fell swoop and swore to rid the nation of its international profile as a chronic debtor-nation. Many doubted the wisdom and even sanity of this economic strategy but decided to watch and pray. In a cruel and ironic twist of fate, the same debt profile has opened up again with alarming implications and under the watch of the same Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

    Judging by all available data, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, in her second tour and now as the coordinating Minister, is presiding over the worst spell and spree of kleptocracy in the history of the nation. All she could now do is to wring her hands and hint about oil as a curse—a theoretical no-brainer for sure. Meanwhile, the presidential airline boasts of at least ten planes in its fleet while the British Prime Minister goes about on commercial flights. In Abuja, it is said that they now sell one million naira per bottle champagne.

    In the case of Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, how can anybody justify or rationalise the bizarre feudal munificence by which under his watch the Central Bank of the nation became one huge financial almshouse dispensing largesse to anybody in sight? What is the modern theory of economic management behind this bastard feudalism, or is this a classic case of avant-garde political radicalism fronting for economic and social retrogression?

    In a general culture of lawlessness and impunity there is nothing to choose between impunity at the micro-level and impunity at the macro level. They are just two sides of the same bad coin. This is not the time for any partisan equivocation. Nigeria has been poorly served by its undeserving political elite. It will take a character-changing event to effect any rectification.

    But it is not a situation that can subsist for long. Once it was said that the Congo could not happen here. And then General Abacha came along. Even in a civilian dispensation under an ascendant faction of the political elite, the coup against capital continues. It is useful to recall that at a point Mobutu also indulged his cruel fancies in a sham National Conference. As a thousand mysterious militias and unknown gunmen continue to put Nigerians to sword at will, let the fate of the old Congo and the ruins of Gbadolite concentrate our mind for once.

  • Ogun PDP: The Abuja ‘coup’

    Ogun PDP: The Abuja ‘coup’

    There has been an upbeat in the polity. From all indications, there is a looming volatile and combustible confusion that is capable of tearing into shreds the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, the party that claims to be the biggest in Africa.

    There’s no doubt that the PDP is a party run by ‘big people’, which has offered too little to Nigerians in the last 14 years of democratic governance. Therefore, those who call the party an alliance of strange bedfellows may not be too wrong after all as most of the members seem to be united in only one accord – the love of the stomach and filthy lucre.

    Every now and again, the rumbles that tear through the soul of the party are far greater than a volcanic eruption with devastating consequences. I am sure, Bamanga Tukur, the national chairman of the party, cannot be sleeping with his two eyes closed at the moment. This is because some elements within the party cannot really come to terms with his style of administration. To them, he has come on board to ‘chop’ and not to offer any valuable legacy in leadership.

    For now, Tukur seems to have held the rampaging tempest trying to dislodge him from his post at bay. One moment, it is as if he would not survive yet another day in office; the next moment, he is on the offensive again, fighting real and imaginary enemies. By the last count, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, the former national secretary of the party, and Bode Mustapha, the national auditor, have been yanked off their offices. If Oyinlola’s ouster was through the instrumentality of the law, Mustapha’s case was quite curious, dramatic, intriguing and strange. The latter was the culmination of several subtle but treacherous moves aided and abetted by Tukur and his lackeys. In this latest chess game, Bode George, the discredited party chieftain who is going about with a moral baggage of an ex-convict, played a prominent role.

    George had, a fortnight ago, surreptitiously corralled chieftains of the party from the South-west into Abuja for a meeting with Tukur. Some of the leaders of the party who could read between the lines stayed away from that purposeless extravaganza. But others, who were goaded by vaulting ambitions and greed, could not smell any rat. They consequently rail-roaded their motley crowd of followers into the Golgotha that had been prepared for them in Abuja. What followed is the mass slaughter that was unleashed on the unsuspecting party faithful.

    Though the ‘family meeting’ was cloaked in the façade of a reconciliation gambit, those at the meeting were dumbfounded when they discovered that they had voluntarily walked into a booby trap set for them by Bode George and others. In one fell swoop, all the contending groups in Ogun State PDP – the Olusegun Obasanjo’s, Jubril Martins Kuye’s and Gbenga Daniel’s groups – were all deposited inside the trash can. The only man left standing is Buruji Kashamu, who, apparently, had a fore-knowledge of the tsunami.

    It was a well- orchestrated coup d’état. A few hours to the Abuja parley, Tukur, through a top legal practitioner based in Abuja, went round the courts and withdrew all the pending cases instituted against Buruji’s group by one of the other groups. The dummy that was sold was that Buruji would follow suit and withdraw all his court cases to pave way for genuine reconciliation. But this was not to be. As soon as the other cases were withdrawn, Buruji became adamant and would not take part in such a charade. That action actually sent a danger signal to the other groups. But alas, it was damn too late in the day to do a rethink or a re-map of strategy. That was how the other contending groups were led to the slaughter slab.

    With power now fully in Buruji’s kitty, the businessman turned politician was said to have thoroughly lambasted Gbenga Daniel, the immediate past governor of Ogun State, who is widely believed to have contributed enormously to the streak of misfortune that has trailed the party in Ogun State in recent times. He was said to have pointedly told Daniel that he (Daniel) was an impostor having left the PDP in 2011 to pitch his tent with the Peoples Party of Nigeria, PPN, the party he founded and funded to achieve a selfish motive.

    Daniel has been desperate to return to the PDP ever since because of the messy situation he found himself soon after the 2011 election. In that election, his favourite PPN came a miserable third behind the PDP and the Action Congress of Nigeria, ACN, who came second and first respectively. Not even his attempt to ‘romance’ Kunle Amosun, the incumbent governor of the state, now his nemesis, had paid off. Instead, Daniel has been at the receiving end of a barrage of legal cocktails which have greatly unsettled him. He is, therefore, believed to be seeking sanctuary in the PDP as one sure way to wriggle out of the political cobweb in which he has been trapped.

    During the campaign for the 2011 general election, Daniel had confidently boasted to whoever cared to listen, including President Goodluck Jonathan himself, that he was capable of winning the governorship election in Ogun State, through the PPN. At that time, his illusion was that he could win the election and then ‘decamp’ with his PPN followers almost immediately back to the PDP. By doing this, he was obviously infatuated with a false sense of superiority and unfounded popularity even at a time it was clear that his public rating had plummeted.

    It appeared that Jonathan and the party hierarchy in Abuja was sucked in by these vainglorious and delusive promises. This is apparent from events leading to the 2011 election. Daniel had so much sweet-tongued the president to toeing his line of thoughts that any contrary opinion expressed over the delicate position of the PDP in Ogun State election at that time was easily dismissed with a wave of the hand.

    Today, Daniel is like a fish out of water, hence his desperation for a reunion with Ogun PDP by all means. Unfortunately, in trying to reunite with the PDP in Ogun State, he is not willing to follow the laid-down procedure of the party -go back to his ward and rejoin the party. Perhaps, he believes that as a former chief executive of the state, it would be too demeaning for him to be subjected to such party procedures. He has not also helped matters by his blunt refusal to make up with those whom he had stepped or even crushed their toes during the 2011 general election. Above all, there is also this problem of trying to seize the control of the PDP in Ogun State, a move many of the stakeholders consider insulting and outlandish.

    Apart from the kid’s gloves with which Mr. President, Tukur and the party hierarchy in Abuja are treating Daniel for reasons best known to them, some of the past governors of PDP, namely Segun Oni, Olusegun Agagu and Adebayo Alao-Akala, are also believed to be fronting for him and doing whatever is possible to bring him back to the fold. Of particular mention is Oni, who, as former vice-chairman of the party in the South-west, preoccupied himself with the task of bringing in the embattled former governor. Unfortunately, that solo effort has led to his sudden ouster from the exalted position.

    By now, all the powerful men of yesterday must have seen the nakedness of power. They are now like political lepers, courtesy of selfishness and greed. What is certain is that Tukur may have only scored a Pyrrhic victory as the South-west PDP, particularly Ogun PDP, gets further enmeshed and embroiled in internal wrangling. Until genuine reconciliation is effected, the crisis in Ogun State PDP is far from being over. In fact, it has just begun!

  • A coup and its unending controversy

    A coup and its unending controversy

    The collapse of true federalism in Nigeria has its root in the military incursion into politics on January 15, 1966. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU revisits the fall of the first legitimate government and the crisis of nation-building the military coup unleashed on the polity.

     

     

    It was a day of confusion in Lagos, the former Federal Capital Territory (FCT). The city was enveloped in panic. Many civil servants on their way to work in the morning turned back. Markets closed abruptly, almost at sunrise. Around Ikoyi and Obalende, which was a stone throw from the State House, people ran helter sketer. Political, economic and social activities were instantly paralysed.

    Ministers were woken up by gunshots from aggrieved soldiers. Some of them were alerted to the danger earlier, but they had ignored the warning signal. Some of them stayed in doors, waiting for information. Others drove to their offices in boldness. But the Federal Secretariat Complex, Ikoyi, was empty. Those outside Lagos were trapped in their destinations because there was no movement. Nigerians were seized by anxiety and tension.

    Before January 15, 1966, coups were not new in Africa. But a political scientist, Prof. Isawa Elaigwu, said that “this date marked the effective explosion of the military on the Nigerian political arena”. Bloody mutinies have been reported in Sudan, Egypt and Togo. But the coup of the five majors still dazed the political class. Soon, the news was all over the place that the Prime Minister, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, was missing. Many hours later, it was confirmed that the Head of Government had been killed and his body deposited in a bush on the Lagos/Abeokuta Road. Simultaneously, a pall of gloom descended on Northern Nigeria. The Premier, Alhaji Ahmadu Bello, had been killed. The same tragedy had befallen the Premier of Western Region, Chief Ladoke Akintola, and Minister of Finance Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh was the only minister killed by the army. Also killed by the rampaging soldiers were some senior military officers, including Brigadier Maimalari, Brigadier Ademoyega Ademulegun, and Col. Ralph Sodeinde.

    Anger was bold on the face of the coup leader, Major Chukwuemeka Nzeogwu, who had come on air to inform anxious Nigerians about the forceful change of government. He cited many reasons for the change of government. The ring leader and his allies; Emeka Ifeajuna, Adewale Ademoyega, and others, accused the government of corruption, tribalism and lack of discipline. They promised hard times for the ‘ten per centers in high places. To reposition the country, they said, was a priority. Nzeogwu and his colleagues portrayed the soldiers as modernising agents.

    However, the euphoria was short-lived. On the second day, January 16, the tune changed. Due to human error, there was a hollow in the execution of the coup. Killings were restricted to the North and West. Since no prominent Igbo politician was killed, the uprising was decked in an ethnic garb. Thus, it has been observed that the way the coup was executed created suspicions and stigmatised it with ethnic colouring. Up came the General Officer Commanding the Nigerian Army, Major-General Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi, who tricked the mutineers to come to Lagos, where he asked them to surrender to him. Although he became the beneficiary of the mutiny, he claimed that the coup plotters deserved punishment to restore discipline to the military and appease the North for the death of their political and military leaders. As part of his scheme to assert authority, later, the politically ambitious G.O.C asked the Council of Ministers, at gun point, to resolve to hand over to the military. The ministers, led by the late Dr. Kingsley Mbadiwe, could not muster the strength to resist the military’s incursion into politics. The Acting President, the late Dr. Nwafor Orizu, was also helpless. Having correctly interpreted the body language of the power-thirsty soldiers, they caved in. The parliament and council of ministers went with the wind of change.

    Had the civilian leaders taken decisive steps ahead of the tragedy, the destruction would, probably, have been averted. The Minister of Information, the late Chief Ayo Rosiji, had been inundated with complaints of a likely coup by junior officers by Brigadier Ademulegun in Kaduna. The Ondo-born Army officer had urged him to convey the information to Balewa in Lagos. He advised that the Prime Minister should act with speed, warning that delay could be dangerous. Ademulegun emphasised that the lives of senior politicians and military officers were in grave danger. Rosiji’s biographer, Nna Mba, stated that when the former minister mentioned it to the Prime Minister, Balewa, “gave a characteristic fatalistic response”. He admittedly dismissed it with a wave of the hand. Perhaps, Balewa was preoccupied with the preparations for the meeting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government holding in Lagos that month. The Prime Minister said he was not afraid because death would be the ultimate end of existence. Also, in his memoirs, former Inspector-General of Police Alhaji M. D. Yusufu recalled that similar warnings by the police were blatantly ignored by the Prime Minister.

    The result was disastrous. Following the coup, Nigeria was instantly assailed by a monumental crisis of nation-building. Ironsi’s first step was threatening to federalism. Soldiers of northern origin were angry that the coup masterminded by the Igbo officers was aimed at shifting power from the North to the East. The inexperienced military Head of State dismantled the federal structure and foisted on the country a centralised, unitary system when he enacted Decree 1, 1966. He appointed four military governors; the late Col. Adekunle Fajuyi (West), Col. Usman Katsina (North), Col. David Ejoor (Midwest) and Col. Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu (East). He set up an ad hoc constitutional conference which hit the rock, although he failed to set up a federal cabinet in time. “ It took Ironsi three months to make any political move, but actually five months for him to opt for greater centralisation of power through unitarism”, recalled Elaigwu in his book titled: “Gowon: The Biography of a soldier-statesman”. “In a way, it may be argued that General Ironsi was a victim of circumstances which required the quick use of his mental capacity and political subtlety-two traits Ironsi did not possess in adequate amounts”, he added. Besides, Eliagwu pointed out that “the political pulls within the system may have made Ironsi vacillate in making radical changes in the federal-regional relations”.

    Barely six months after the first coup, Ironsi was killed in Ibadan, capital of the Western State, when he was guest of Fajuyi. In the retaliatory coup, Fajuyi, who was defending Ironsi, sacrificed his life. He was killed by soldiers of northern origin avenging the murder of Bello and Balewa.

    Senior officers were not prepared for the challenges imposed by the sudden regime change. Following Ironsi’s death, a succession battle rattled he top hierarchy. Young military officers from the North refused to take orders from the second-in-command to Ironsi, the late Brig. Babafemi Ogundipe. They insisted that the Chief of Army Staff, Col. Yakubu Gowon, should assume the reins. The governor of the Eastern State objected, saying that it was against the seniority principle. He warned that a dangerous precedent, which could erode discipline, was being set.

    Gowon succeeded Ironsi as the Head of State. Tension later brewed as cases of mistrust among the various officers from the diverse, heterogeneous country were rife. Ojukwu advised soldiers of eastern origin to return home, since their lives were no more safe outside the region. The chain of events cumulated in the declaration of the Republic of Biafra by Ojukwu, who proclaimed himself as the Military Head of State and Commander-In-Chief of the new country he carved out of Nigeria. A bitter civil war ensued, with heavy casualties recorded on both sides. No fewer than one million lives were lost. Although Nigeria won the secession battle, it did not win the battle for national unity.

    Analysts have reflected on the justification for the first coup. Was it the best option at the time? Were soldiers in government better than the civilians in the first 13 years and later, 15 years of military rule? Today, coup is old fashioned, but historians have always noted that Nzeogwu may have acted out of patriotism, although the coup could also have been executed with minimal casualties. But the coup was infectious. Other coups and blood-letting activities of the military in July 1966, 1967, 1975, 1983, 1985, 1986 by Major Gideon Okar’s group, the pre-emptied Vatsa coup of 1988, and Gen. Sani Abacha’s displacement of the interim contraception headed by Chief Ernest Shonekan, were built on the foundation laid by the five majors.

    On all counts, soldiers deviated from the cause of moral decency. Seized by greed, they pillaged the treasury and did incalculable damage to public discipline. For example, the former Vice Chancellor of the University of Jos, Prof. E.U. Emovon, noted that Gowon’s method of a blend of militarism and humanism yielded under the stress of corruption and nepotism perpetrated by his lieutenants. Major-General Muhammadu Buhari, who had resolved to restore confidence in government by fighting corruption, breached human rights in the process. His successor, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, presided over a corrupt administration which wrecked the economy. Gen. Abacha became a despot.

    Observers pointed out that, had the foundation laid by the civilian authorities been sustained, the coup may have lacked justification. But the warring civilian leaders, who fired salvos from their ethnically-inclined political parties, had their own inherent weaknesses. The polity witnessed political stability when the federal government and the regions shared powers in an atmosphere of cooperative federalism and critical inter-governmental relations. But electoral tensions and recurrent suspicion between the North and the South, which complained about domination, later heralded political instability. Renowned historian Dr. Mba contented that there is substance in the criticisms that they lacked courage, conviction and vision of the society they had hoped to lead after the attainment of independence. She also agreed that “the political elite had also been held responsible for promoting ethnicity for political gains”.

    Mba also agreed that, in the First Republic, “corruption was practised and not checked”, adding that the inability or lack of will on the part of Balewa to insist on all his colleagues observing the rules contributed to the general demoralisation and breakdown of the government’s authority.

    To avoid repeating past mistakes, the historian advised that leaders should ensure that politics is based on principles and issues, not on personalities or ethnicity, and should be conducted according to enforced rules of fair play. Mba also advised that personal ambition must not be allowed to supersede the communal or national good, and power must not be used only or even mainly to further personal ambition. The historian had solid advice for youths who would drive the ship of the fledgling nation-state in the future. Young Nigerians must learn to unlearn the ethnic prejudices which had burdened previous generations so that they may work and socialise together freely. By so doing, they may create a more egalitarian and just society in the future,” Mba said.

     

  • Central African Republic foils another coup

    Central African Republic foils another coup

    Security forces in Central African Republic arrested three men suspected of plotting to overthrow President Francois Bozize, the country’s chief prosecutor has said.

    CAR is one of the world’s poorest and least stable countries, and the government of Bozize has claimed over the years to have uncovered several coup plans, including one earlier this year.

    “Interrogations are ongoing, but the three plotters have already confessed their plan to overthrow the head of state,” Reuters quoted Alain Tomo as saying at a press conference.

    Tomo said one of the suspects is former Chadian army officer Job Nendobe Bergueba, who was hoarding a stash of automatic rifles, grenades and communications equipment at his residence.

    The three were arrested on October 9.

    Bozize came to power in 2003 after leading a rebellion and he has since won elections broadly criticised as flawed.

    He sacked his finance minister in June after accusing him of plotting a separate putsch.