Tag: democracy

  • Guardians of democracy

    Guardians of democracy

    In the beginning, our republic opted for liberal democracy as the form of government best suited to the advancement of our common political, economic and social objectives. In any case, we had no suitable alternatives in view of the heterogeneous backgrounds of the various groups that were brought together by our colonisers.

    Liberal democracy combines two of the most contested models of governance. While liberalism underscores the importance of the freedom of individuals to pursue their ideals of life without fear of coercion from other individuals or society, democracy highlights the sovereignty of the people. Lincoln’s definition is apt. Democracy is the government of the people by the people and for the people.

    Therefore, the conjunction of liberalism and democracy in liberal democracy makes sense. Individual freedom is maintained as long as the voice of the individual is effectively introduced into and entertained by the process that culminates in law-making and in the governance of the polity.  A true democratic system makes this possible through various processes and institutions: elections, referenda, community organisations, civil societies, political parties, etc. These are the institutions of democracy.

    In an ideal situation, where objective reason regulates individual inclinations and ego is kept in check, the institutions of democracy are sufficiently effective in protecting individuals from abuse and in greasing the wheels of democratic governance. In such a situation, every citizen obeys the rules, serves as his brother’s or sister’s keeper, refrains from corrupting and abusing the system and does his or her part in protecting the system from collapse. Needless to say, however, there has never been such an ideal situation. Humans have always been too human.

    It is with our understanding of the baseness of human nature that we device the means of protecting these institutions of democracy. We set up agencies for promoting law and order and the rule of law. These include the police and the courts. We entrust to them our individual lives and properties and we expect that should there be an unlawful breach by any fellow member of the republic, these agencies as guardians of our democracy will rise to the occasion to protect us not just from bodily harm but also from emotional abuse.

    The confidence that we repose in the guardians of our democracy is the heart and soul of the system. Compare this with a similar interest we have in one of the segments of our lives as citizens. I have in mind the economic system through which we enter into contracts either as buyers and sellers or as creditors and debtors. We cannot trust the fulfilment of such obligations to individual goodness; therefore, we rely on the courts to protect the terms of the contract and are assured that we can seek redress in case of an unlawful breach. If there is a generalised skepticism about the effectiveness of these agencies in protecting contracts, the economic system is bound to breakdown and collapse.

    By the same token, if there is a generalised cynicism about the effectiveness of the guardians of democracy in the discharge of their sacred responsibilities for the protection of the institutions of democracy, it is a short cut to anarchy. For individuals would have no reasonable alternative to self-help in such a situation. There is little or no difference between the state of nature where everyone fends for him or herself, with its attendant uncertainties of life and limb, and a state of society in which one is at the mercy of others who are illegitimately protected by powerful interests at one’s expense.

    Since the pronouncements of the Supreme Court on the election petitions by governorship candidates from various states, there have been comments, some adverse, others favourable on the performance of the court and its eminent jurists. None of the comments can or should be ruled out of court. In a free society, the freedom of opinion and discussion is guaranteed. More importantly, the justices are human and adorning them with the robe of infallibility is dangerous. Indeed, as humans, it cannot also be ruled out that some of them are subject to extra-legal or extra-judicial influence and ideologies. And the fact that there have been individual defences here or elsewhere against such accusations or challenges amount to little. Surely, an accusation that is left unanswered amounts to acquiescence even if the answer doesn’t cut it.

    In the case of the United States Supreme Court, I have always been stunned by the fact that a president nominates a justice ostensibly based on the justice’s knowledge of the law and his or her qualifications for the bench, but in reality based on his or her judicial philosophy, which could be liberal, conservative or moderate. And when senators are called upon to advise and consent, it is the judicial philosophy that dominates their mind. How is it not to be expected that particular judges will decide in particular ways? There is no pretence about it. Hence the conflict between Senate and President whenever there is a vacancy.

    In our case, there is a shameful deception, which was laid bare by no other person than Chief Obafemi Awolowo in a powerful 1980 paper titled: “On Man’s Injustice to Man.” That paper was a response to Chief Graham-Douglass’ paper titled: “Judicial Process Today: Constitutional Interpretation”, which had been read at the Commonwealth Law Conference in Lagos. The Graham-Douglass paper had sought to defend the judgment of the Supreme Court in the Awolowo v. Shagari and others, that is, the election petition of Chief Awolowo against the declaration of Alhaji Shagari as the winner of the 1979 presidential election.

    Chief Graham-Douglass had suggested that “the public interest is a potent –not just potential—factor in the production of judicial decision in cases of constitutional significance and consequence” and that in the case of “Awolowo v. Shagari such was the intensity of public interest generated by the case and such was the extent of the judgment of the Supreme Court that not many Nigerians would have castigated the court for manifestly taking into consideration and predicating its decision inter alia on the repercussions of the decision and the manner in which it would either assuage or frustrate the public interest.”

    Among the factors of public interest that the justices were understood to have considered were the fact that the Head of State had received messages of congratulations from world leaders on the conduct of the election, that market women from Lagos and Southwest Obas had visited the President-elect with solidarity messages, and the outgoing Head of State had completed his handing over notes for the new administration to take over, etc. The argument then was that the Supreme Court had to take all of these into consideration in its decision. Public interest must trump legalism; the argument seems to suggest.

    Of course, Chief Awolowo turned the argument into shreds, debunking all the judicial precedents identified by Chief Graham-Douglass. The interesting point, however, is that while dwelling so much on public policy and public interest as good ground for judicial decision, Chief Graham-Douglass goes on to suggest that in the case of Awolowo v. Shagari and others, the court’s dismissal of Awolowo’s appeal was based on another ground, that is, the “fractionalising of a legal entity” as Chief Awolowo puts it. And because that judgment was not supposed to serve as a precedent, it is clear how much of a moral burden it has proved to be on the Fatayi-Williams Court to this day.

    Based on Justice Fatayi-Williams’ alleged political sympathy for the ruling party in Western Region in 1964 and 1965, Chief Awolowo raised several questions about the manner of the jurist’s appointment as Chief Justice in August 1979 just as Awolowo’s election petition appeal was formally submitted. Other two candidates considered were Justice Udo Udoma and Chief Rotimi Williams.

    The Supreme Court, like any other court, is a human artifice which is not immune to human frailties. Citizens must be on guard to protect the eminent jurists from their humanity.Their Lordships must appreciate this. Besides, it is the duty of citizens to jealously guard their freedom from narcissistic judicial philosophies.

  • APC hails Tinubu as veritable pillar of democracy

    APC hails Tinubu as veritable pillar of democracy

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday described its  National Leader , Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, as a veritable pillar of the country ‘s  modern democracy and a proven political genius.

    In a congratulatory message to the former Lagos State governor on the conferment of  The Sun Man of the Year award, the  APC  National Secretary, Mai Mala Buni, said Tinubu’s  contribution   to the current democracy in the country cannot be overlooked.

    It is no surprise,Buni said, “that, in addition to your status of Asiwaju, you also hold the revered title of Jagaban Borgu. As the APC National Leader, you have continued to guide, inspire and lead our noble causes of liberating our people from oppression and improving the quality of life of Nigerians.

    “You are a sterling example of statesmanship and steadfastness. Notably, your efforts, as a major arrowhead, alongside other like-minded progressive Nigerians, led to the merger of parties to form the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    “This ultimately resulted in the defeat of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the installation of the current APC-led government.

    “Indeed, you have shown the world, through your doggedness and qualitative leadership, that Nigeria can indeed take its pride of place among comity of progressive nations.”

    He wished him  “many more happy, healthy and fulfilled years of service to the nation and party.”

  • Fayose hails judiciary for ‘saving democracy’

    Fayose hails judiciary for ‘saving democracy’

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose has praised the judiciary for restoring the mandate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governors. He said the victory has saved the country’s democracy.

    Speaking in Umuahia, the Abia State capital, at the thanksgiving for Governor Okezie Ikpeazu, Fayose said the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) wanted to scuttle democracy by stealing the mandate of the PDP governors.

    Fayose, who spoke on behalf of five other PDP governors, assured Ikpeazu that they will always identify with him, adding that he should not disappoint his people.

    He said the people were yet to see the change they were tricked into voting for, noting that “true change will only come to the country and its people when PDP takes over the rulership of the country come next elections.”

    His words: “When you look for change in the present administration you can only get one chance, which has made the people to keep waiting for the expected change to come.

    “How can we have change when the electricity tariff will go up without any increase in power generation and poor service, then if the expected change comes, the people will really suffer.”

    New National Chairman of the PDP, Alhaji Ali Modu Sheriff said the party is marching to Aso Rock, come next elections, stressing that every party member is ready for the move.

    Sheriff said when the party rolls out its master plan, the incumbent ruling APC will run back to wherever it came from.

    He said the crowd present at the Umuahia township stadium shows that the governor won the election. “This crowd shows that we won the election clearly and the results were not written.”

    Deputy National Chairman Uche Secondus called for special prayers for the country. “This country needs prayers for it to move forward.

    “We need prayers as PDP members are being hounded every day, their home broken into by members of the ruling party for nothing. I want to warn those being used that they are gradually turning this country into a police state.”

    Governor Ikpeazu described his victory as a victory for all, which will bring unity and equity based on the Abia Charter of Equity which was written by its founding fathers.

    “The victory is about the state and its people, and about what God wants to do in Abia through me and people of like minds”.

    He hinted that several roads in Aba were ready for commissioning while rural electrification is being provided for all, irrespective of political inclination.

    Governors at the service included Nyesom Wike (Rivers), Ifeanyi Okowa (Delta), Udom Emmanuel (Akwa Ibom), among others.

  • Democracy cannot survive without rule of law – Ekweremadu

    Democracy cannot survive without rule of law – Ekweremadu

    The Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, has said that no democracy in the world could survive without strict adherence to the rule of law.

    This is contained in a statement signed by his Special Adviser on Media, Mr Uche Anichukwu and issued to newsmen on Saturday in Abuja.

    According to the statement, Ekweremadu made the remark at a dinner organised by the International Law Institute (ILI), Washington DC, for its alumni in Nigeria.

    He noted that no country could experience meaningful development without the rule of law.

    He said: “Democracy becomes gravely imperilled if the powers of the judiciary to enforce compliance with the rule of law are subjected to legal, extra-legal, and sociological limitations.

    “Our task as an emerging democracy is to continue to build a society where government agencies as well as individuals and private entities must be subjected to and accountable under the law.

    “We must ensure that the process by which laws are enacted, administered, and enforced is accessible, fair and efficient.

    “We must ensure that justice is delivered according to established laws, timeously, competently, ethically and independently.

    “I hold the opinion and fervently so that the principle of the rule of law is at the heart of the survival of democracy.

    “A democracy without the rule of law is like salt that has lost its saltiness.’’

    The Senator noted that the World Bank had indicated that economic growth, political modernisation, protection of human rights and other worthy objectives, were hinged on the rule of law.

    He expressed concern that developing nations, which were in dire need of development, lacked the rule of law to a large extent.

    He attributed the situation to lack of strong democratic institutions, lack of independence of the judiciary and political instability.

    Ekweremadu assured that the National Assembly would continue to partner ILI to build the capacity of its members and parliamentary staff.

    The statement quoted Kim Phan, the Executive Director of ILI, as expressing happiness with the growth of democracy in Nigeria.

    She also expressed joy with the opportunity the institute had to be part of the country’s success story.

    She said that the institute was committed to the growth of democracy and development of Nigeria.

  • It’s rape of democracy, says Sylva as INEC stops poll

    It’s rape of democracy, says Sylva as INEC stops poll

    Decision in order, say Dickson, PDP

    bayelsa poll Results

    Local Govt          APC      PDP

    • Brass 21, 755   6,516
    • Sagbama 5,382       28,934
    • Yenagoa 14,563 24,258
    • Kolokuma/ Opokuma     6,896      7,619
    • Ekeremor 7,918    14,604
    • Ogbia 9,106    13,051
    • Nembe 6,974    10,768 

    •Election cancelled in Southern Ijaw Local Govt

     

    Another electoral logjam surfaced yesterday —courtesy of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), which failed to conclude a governorship election.

    Just as it did in Kogi State last month, the agency threw a spanner in the works,  declaring Saturday’s election in Bayelsa State inconclusive.

    These are the two governorship elections so far held under the chairmanship of Prof. Mahmud Yakubu as INEC chairman.

    INEC cancelled the rescheduled poll in Southern Ijaw Local Government Council, one of the eight local governments in the state.

    Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) Baritor Kpagir said the cancellation was endorsed by the national headquarters.

    Kpagir said the election was cancelled, following reports that the poll in Southern Ijaw was substantially marred by violence, ballot box snatching, intimidation and other irregularities.

    The REC, at the state collation centre located inside the multipurpose hall of the secretariat of Yenagoa Local Government, noted that in the interest of international compliance with best practice, the cancellation of the election became necessary.

    Kpagir indicated that a new date for the election would be chosen and communicated to all the stakeholders.

    The Chief Retuning Officer, Prof. Zena Akpogu, who is also the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calabar in Cross River State, maintained that he could not declare any of the candidates the winner of the poll, without the results from Southern Ijaw Local Government.

    The mainly-riverine Southern Ijaw is the biggest council in the state. It has over 120,000 voting strength, which would decide the eventual winner of the election between Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) Seriake Dickson and the All Progressives Congress’ (APC’s) Chief Timipre Sylva.

    The governorship election took place on Saturday in Yenagoa, Kolokuma/Opokuma, Sagbama, Brass, Ekeremor, Ogbia and Nembe Councils. The poll in Southern Ijaw council was rescheduled for Sunday also as a result of violence and killings.

    In the collated results from the seven local governments as announced by the Returning Officer, the PDP leads with 33,154 votes. The PDP polled 105,748 votes as against APC’s 72,594 votes.

    Prior to the cancellation of the election in Southern Ijaw, some PDP women and youths, who wore black dresses and led by the party’s Bayelsa Women Leader Faith Opuene, protested near the collation centre, expressing displeasure over the poll in Southern Ijaw.

    Barely 30 minutes after the protest, despite the police ban on demonstrations, some militants from Southern Ijaw escorted two Hilux vans, one of them with Bayelsa Government House registration number: BYGH145, into the collation centre.

    The two vehicles were loaded with uncounted ballot materials, without any security escort or INEC official.

    The militants, who were singing war songs, as they alighted from the Hilux vans, claimed that they escaped from Southern Ijaw with the results of three units of Amassoma in the council area, in view of the violence, but the electoral materials were not accepted by the INEC officials at the collation centre.

    The Deputy Inspector-General of Police (DIG) in charge of Training and Development, Hashimu Argungu, told the militants to give peace a chance, assuring them that INEC would address their complaints.

    The results are: Brass Local Government PDP 21,755 votes, APC 6,516 votes.

    Sagbama PDP: 24, 258, APC 5, 382.  Yenagoa, PDP 24,258, APC 14, 563

    Kolokuma/Opokuma PDP 7,619 votes, APC 6,896.

    Ekeremor PDP 14,602, APC 7,918 votes.

    For the results announced yesterday: Ogbia PDP 13,051, APC 9,106 and Nembe PDP 10,768 APC 6,974 votes.

    From the seven local government areas, PDP polled 105,748 votes. APC had 72,594 votes, with a difference of 33,154 votes.

    The police warned against plans by some people to protest in Yenagoa, the state capital.

    A statement by the Deputy Inspector-General of Police (DIG), Hashimu Argungu, banned all forms of procession, rally or demonstration.

    The statement was circulated at INEC’s collation centre in Yenagoa, where the results of the governorship election in the state were being announced.

    It was gathered that the PDP had already mobilised people to protest against the rescheduled election that was held in Southern Ijaw.

    Argungu said the police were informed about plans by some “disgruntled elements” to carry out illegal rallies and demonstrations in the state.

    The DIG said: “This form of conduct will jeopardise the ongoing electoral process. Therefore, the command warns all intending perpetrators to desist from such acts, as it will deal decisively with any person or group of persons who wish to engage in any conduct that will compromise the existing peaceful atmosphere.

    “Members of the public are advised to go about their normal businesses, as security agencies are poised to guarantee the safety of lives and property.”

    Earlier, Dickson was live on the state-owned Radio Bayelsa, protesting the electoral process, at the time he was leading with over 28,000 votes.

    Dickson asked residents to hit the streets at 2p.m. for a rally to protest what was happening at the collation centre and he vowed to lead the protest.

    The Bayelsa governor, who fielded questions from listeners, said: “There will be a rally to resist what is happening now. It is clear to me that security services have become an army of occupation.”

    Security was strengthened in the state capital, with four Armoured Personnel Carriers (APCs) deployed round the state collation centre.

    Detachment of anti-bomb squad, riot policemen and soldiers took over some strategic areas in Yenagoa, to prevent a breakdown of law and order.

     

  • Judiciary is defending democracy, says Omoworare

    Judiciary is defending democracy, says Omoworare

    Senator Babajide Christopher representing Osun East Senatorial District and Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules and Business has described his victory at the Court of Appeal sitting in Akure, Ondo State on Wednesday December 2, 2015 in a petition filled by Mr Francis Adenigba Fadahunsi of the Peoples Democratic Party  (PDP) as an “Affirmation of God’s Voice and Peoples’ Choice”.

    The Senator said he is grateful to God for the victory. “Yahweh, the Lord Almighty has continued to ordain my steps and has relentlessly fought my battles for me. I appreciate my party All Progressives Congress  (APC) for standing by me through thick and thin. I thank my Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmad Tinubu and my Governor Ogbeni Rauf Adesoji Aregbesola for reposing confidence in me.”

    In a statement by his Media Assistant, Tunde Dairo, the Senator said “I most importantly dedicate this victory to God, the verdict is an affirmation of His voice; and I also dedicate our triumph to the people who gave us their mandate freely despite unprecedented violence and perpetration of electoral impropriety by PDP and it’s candidate. My Constituents, the good people of Ife Ijesa who voted en masse for me during the election, stood by me at the Electoral Tribunal and remained steadfast at the Court of Appeal.”

    “We must not forget on time that the rigging machinery of PDP and its candidate was put to full use during the senatorial election of March 28, 2015. Unparalleled violence also played out before, during and after that faithful day. The  desperation continued the following day with the abduction of the Returning Officer of Ife Central Local Government with the deliberate rigging, mutilation and falsification of the  original copy of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Form EC8C before the senatorial collation. Furthermore, electoral materials were tampered with in the custody of INEC”.

    “Therefore, I applaud my witnesses  – APC faithfuls who testified despite intimidation, harassment and coercion. I say a big thank you to my very experienced legal team and I am grateful to the Judiciary for once again standing on the path of the truth and justice.”

    Senator Omoworare added: “I assure Nigerians of quality legislation in the Senate, proud representation of Osun State and delivery of democratic dividends to Osun East  (Ife Ijesa) Senatorial District. Lastly, we must task INEC and the judiciary to investigate, arraign, prosecute and bring to book characters that have criminally impinged the Electoral Act during electoral processes to serve as deterrent to others. There must be a minimum irreduceable standard of decency and civility expected from the political class, otherwise politics becomes a game of crassitude and anglo-saxon criminal jurisprudence becomes ineffectual”.

     

  • Supplementary budget passage, victory for democracy, says Buhari

    Supplementary budget passage, victory for democracy, says Buhari

    President Mohammadu Buhari has commended the National Assembly for the passage of the 2015 Supplementary Budget.

    The president said the quick passage of the N574.5 estimated budget would enable him tackle the challenges confronting Nigerians over scarcity of fuel, among other pressing economic challenges.

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters (House of Representatives), Abdulrahman Kawu Sumaila, said the president viewed the passage of the bill as a national service devoid of partisan politics by the lawmakers.

    He said: “It has became imperative that the National Assembly pass the budget in order to give the president the legislative backing to carry out important projects across the country in line with the change mantra.

    “The Senate and the House of Representatives acted promptly and in the national interest by expeditiously passing the supplementary budget. This is commendable and it is the spirit of true democrats, because the passage of the bill would go a long way to cushion the economic hardship facing Nigerians, especially the fuel scarcity as a result of the non-payment of petroleum subsidy to the marketers.”

  • Lagos  lawmaker promises  dividends of democracy

    Lagos lawmaker promises dividends of democracy

    Member Lagos State of Assembly representing Surulere  Consistuency 1,Hon. Desmond Olusola Elliot has hosted a stakeholders’ meeting,where he briefed members of his consistuency on the role expected of the legislature

    The stakeholders’ meeting held at the council secretariat with the theme: “Towards a better constituency engagement’’ was simultaneously held in all the 40 constituency was initiated to enumerate the primary responsibility of the lawmaker and address salient issues of the area.

    Speaking at the interactive session, Hon. Desmond Olusola Elliott noted that there had been conflicting ideas on the duties of both the legislative and executive arms by the public. He added that the  functions of the legislature include; appropriation and allocation of fund for projects; legislation and consideration of political or economic actions of the executive and approving them when deserved; over sight function and checking on the executive to ascertain funds allocated are used for the projects they are meant for ;and representation to serve the people by lobbing and influencing the executive to ensure that the yearnings and aspirations of his constituency are meant.

    Also, he assured that a health care centre would be built and affordable stores would be made available to the people.

    Elliott said the needs of the people would be accommodated in next year‘s budget.

    “The essence of having this kind of stakeholders meeting is that we want to move closer to our people and we want to deepen the dividends of democracy, you can see that the area it populated by the people of different social strata, we invite them because we want to hear their opinions and know their feeling about our government in the state.

    “As you have heard, all their grievances and agitations would be noted and taken to the floor and would be deliberated upon .The deliberation won’t end here; it would be addressed on the floor of house and sent to the executive arm for its assent .We have it in mind to use this forum to determine where the shoe pinches our people and to alleviate their sufferings.”

    He also urged the commercial motorcycle and tricycle operators to obey the state’s traffic laws.

    Residents of the Constituency appealed to the Lagos State government to create more Wards and to also create another local government in the area.

    According to the residents, this would aid proper administration and socio-economic development across the length and beneath of the area.

    While addressing the gathering, the Executive Secretary of Surulere Local government Area, Hon. Mrs. Bamidele Hussain, said the stakeholders’ meeting would promote development and good   governance.

    Hussain said: ”The House of Assembly can help us make laws to better the lot of Surulere residents. We need functional Customary Court and a law that will make the Community Development Area (CDA) and Community Development Committee ((CDC) be part and parcel of the local government. ’’We also need more inner roads, skill acquisition and recreational centers to empower our youths.’’

    The event was attended by politicians, traditional rulers, the party chieftains, market women, artisans, interest group amongst others.

  • Guerrilla democracy in Africa

    Guerrilla democracy in Africa

    The Putin Paradigm  revisited

    Events unfolding in Burundi and in neighbouring Rwanda must concentrate the mind about the democratic prospects of post-colonial Africa. In Burundi, the determined efforts of the Hutu president, Pierre Nkurunziza, to hang on to power after exhausting the constitutionally stipulated two terms has led to epic bloodletting on a scale that is beginning to rival the 1972 genocidal mayhem which convulsed the land-locked nation and set it on the path of endemic instability.

    Nkurunziza is no stranger to the killing fields of Bujumbura. His own father, a notable and influential Hutu politician, was killed in the 1972 pogrom when the Burundian president was a mere boy. He has never looked back. When Melchior Ndadaye, the first democratically elected president of Burundi, was assassinated by rogue Tutsi officers in 1993, the nation unraveled in a spiral of violence. After his Hutu successor was killed with the Rwandan Hutu president in 1994 in a mysterious air crash, Nkurunziza took up arms against the Burundian state and its Tutsi supremacist hardliners.

    It should be recalled that this was also the genesis of the Rwandan genocide. The ensuing Burundi Civil War lasted  ten years. In 2005, Nkurunziza was elected president by the parliament after some arduous and tricky negotiations which tested the political ingenuity of Julius Nyerere and later Nelson Mandela. Nkurunziza’s argument for a third term is that since he was not originally elected president by a popular suffragette, his first term could only be regarded as an interim tenure. This has cut no ice with the irate opposition, and the entire country has erupted in chaos.

    In neighbouring Rwanda, Paul Kagame is also toying with a constitutional amendment which will allow him to run for a third term and perhaps perpetual rule. It will be recalled that the austere no-nonsense former guerilla leader has been the de facto ruler of Rwanda since 1994 when his rebel forces swept into Kigali amidst the carnage and cannibalism that accompanied genocide. Kagame himself is a  veteran of the Homeric battlefield of the volcanic region, having fled into exile in Uganda as a toddler with his parents after an earlier Tutsi massacre.

    With Yoweri Museveni who has been in power in Uganda since 1986 and Robert Mugabe who has ruled Zimbabwe with an iron fist since 1979, we can now come to the tentative conclusion that the iron rule of strongmen is the rule rather than the exception in that part of post-colonial Africa. This is not discounting the Democratic Republic of Congo where Kabila the son has been in power since the assassination of his father in 2001, or the other Congo where Nguesso is up to the old tricks having ruled his country in one guise or the other for almost thirty years.

    One thing that unites all the six rulers mentioned , Nkurunziza, Kagame, Museveni ,  the old wizard of Harare, Kabila and Nguesso ,is the fact that they are all former guerilla leaders who deposed the existing status quo of their respective countries by sheer force of arms. They are not about to be dismissed by moral suasion or teary remonstration by the international community. Welcome to guerrilla democracy in Africa.

    Often touted as the most ideal form of governance ever devised by humanity, there is as yet no perfect democracy on earth. Great Britain, the founding father of modern liberal democracy, still has a constitutional monarchy and the American president is not elected by popular votes but by an electoral college. The American senate, patrician and authoritarian, is a deliberate hedge against a descent into mob rule and the more plebian House of Representatives.

    But turning elections to a farce and hollow ritual presents democracy with great difficulties. This is where the Putin paradigm comes to mind. The Putin paradigm is an extremely potent concoction brimming with a petulant defiance of western institutions powered by Russian nationalism, pan-Slavic gusto and an authoritarian democracy which guarantees safety, security and reasonable accountability without caring a hoot about freedom of association, freedom of expression and ultimately freedom of election itself.

    For the past twenty years or so, Vladimir Putin has been cocking a snook at the west without his national support base shrinking. When he exhausted his constitutionally delimited terms, Putin simply put his trusted ally and served as Prime Minister while ruling from the background. After his loyal collaborator finished his term, Putin swept back to office without batting an eyelid.

    Why does the Putin paradigm resonate so profoundly with the Russian people? This is where nationalism often trumps the finer ideals of democracy.  After the collapse of the Soviet empire, its Russian rump quickly unraveled into a reign of political and economic gangsters. A crack security operative, Putin halted the slide into democratic anarchy by putting the oligarchs to sword thereby restoring order and Russian pride. The entire country united behind the new avenging tsar.

    The Putin paradigm finds a fertile soil in a Russian populace long accustomed to treating patriarchal and harshly paternalistic but benevolent authority with indulgence and awe-struck reverence. Having exchanged their old Tsars with a long line of socialist Czars, they are not hooked on the anarchic individualism of liberal democracy.

    In the botched 1905 revolutionary uprising, many of the protesters were found clutching the portrait of the Tsar they called “father” in their bosom even as they succumbed to bullets from OGPU, the Russian secret police. An accidental politician, Putin is the latest Tsar of modern Russian.

    So why don’t the African strongmen try the Putin formula by installing their favourite allies to fulfill all democratic  righteousness? This is where national complexion matters, and where the post-colonial state has tripped very badly in Africa.  Unlike Russia which is a fairly organic and homogenous country in terms of culture and ethnic composition, most African nations are rumbling cauldrons of ethnic, regional and cultural contraries.

    It is obvious that despite his outstanding performance in governance and heroic efforts in imposing unity and harmony on his fractured country from above, Paul Kagame fears another Hutu apocalyptic meltdown once he vacates office or loosens his grips on the levers of the power that he has wielded with such authoritarian sternness and severity. With Hutu nationalism very much at play despite genocide and Kagame’s undeniably sterling performance, it is an excruciating democratic conundrum.

    In Burundi, a curious reverse logic is at play. With Tutsi supremacists such as Pierre Buyoya and Jean-Baptiste Bagaza  still very much on the prowl, Nkurunziza fears that evacuating state control and the levers on military institution would eventuate in a steamrolling by the old Hima Tutsi lions and former ethnic overlords of the nation. It was very much the same group in 1993 that assassinated the hugely popular former Hutu president and his supporters under the pretext of taking them to safety from military mutineers.

    Thus we can see how in a post-colonial Africa riven by ethnic, regional and religious divisions fighting old tyrants often consecrate new tyrannies.  It will be recalled that the only time Robert Mugabe allowed free and fair elections, he was defeated hands down before the old warrior-caste stepped in to disband both the elected and the electorate. It is this fear of the unknown that has turned Yoweri Museveni into a delinquent despot and tired tyrant in the same land where he was dubbed a liberator as his troops swept through Kampala in 1986. Ditto for Joseph Kabila.

    Much as the western democracies clamour for democratic rule in Africa, it can be seen that the situation depends very much on the actual forces on ground and varies from country to country and subcontinent to subcontinent depending on the logic of the cultural and political dominant.

    In West Africa, despite atrophied family tyrannies in Togo, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon and untrammeled military and civilian despotism in Gambia, Congo Brazzaville and Cameroons, the subcontinent as a whole has taken giant strides towards the consolidation of democratic rule in the last two and a half decades. There is no single case of guerrilla democracy in the subcontinent.

    In the Benin Republic, Ghana and Nigeria entrenched military autocracies and regnant forces of the status quo have been defeated in landmark elections with the last election in Nigeria completing the glorious triad. In Senegal, the political status quo has been defeated twice by nationalist forces. In Ivory Coast, Liberia, Sierra Leone the old political hegemony has been disbanded after civil wars. The same thing has happened in Mali, Guinea and lately Burkina Faso after unwarranted military interventions which led to the self-destruction of the old order.

    It is useful to note that what happens in West Africa is a clash of the residual formations of liquidated pre-colonial empires whereas in Rwanda and Burundi you have the unique situation of pre-colonial feudal formations and kingship systems surviving colonization unscathed while casually reclaiming authority and dominance after colonization. The ensuing collision between this old feudal order and the new forces and relations of economic and political production unleashed by modernity provoked such stress and social convulsions  that it eventually led to genocide in the two countries.

    What is important in all this is for each country to bolster its strengths and banish its fears.  In vibrant western democracies with entrenched citizenship, democracy is sustained when individuals, groups and guilds subsume their competing and countervailing egos and self-pride under the rubric of higher national interests. By so doing, individual rights do not disappear but are tailored to national needs and necessity.

    In a post-colonial nation like Nigeria fissured by ethnic, religious and cultural polarities what often drives the system is a negative equilibrium powered by competing and countervailing centres of power. Often, and with enough prayers and luck, this equivalent of tribal nuclear deterrence is enough to prevent the nation from sliding into an apocalyptic meltdown.

    But this neither guarantees national stability nor enhances democratic development in the long run. It merely calcifies the categories leading to a fractured public of competing proto-republics.  From the mixed reaction to the announcement of his cabinet, it is obvious that despite President  Buhari’s most heroic efforts to reform the delinquent Nigerian post-colonial state and make it amenable to a rational order, the ethnic caterwauling and sponsored calumny  will not just disappear .

    There two options available to the president in handling this elite-driven disaffection and sponsored hysteria. He can ignore it as mere blackmail and treat it with the icy contempt he thinks it deserves hoping that when his reforms and outstanding corrective measures finally kick in, even his most craven critics will be shamed into silence. On the other hand, he can see it as a symptom of a state that is overburdened by self-imposed unitarist and statist responsibility.

    There is no harm in erring on the side of caution. This is the time to be creative and think out of the box. In order to enhance the prospects of democracy and accelerated development, Nigeria must achieve what we now propose as an equilibrium of ethnic hubris, that is a situation in which  ethnic narcissism is subsumed under national interest no matter the  military prowess, economic vibrancy, political sagacity or diplomatic perspicuity of competing ethnic formations.

    Although a Herculean task, it is not as impossible as it seems.  A way out is to take another look at the political architecture of the nation and realign it in such a way that it liberates and harmonizes the competing and countervailing energies and geniuses of our different people. In a multi-ethnic nation, what holds true for genuine federalism also holds true for genuine democracy.

    No constituting bloc or cultural unit must be in a position to exercise a veto power on the democratic destiny of the nation. This is the abiding tragedy of guerilla democracy in many African countries.  Nigeria must avoid the road to Bujumbura and a passage to Kigali.

     

  • What Dogara did can derail Democracy -Datti

    What Dogara did can derail Democracy -Datti

    Garba Datti Muhammed representing Sabon Gari Federal Constituency, Kaduna State, rejected his appointment as chairman of the committee on Solid Minerals Development.  He is the former Deputy Minority Leader in the 7th House. In this chat with Victor Oluwasegun and Dele Anofi, he further elaborates on his reasons for rejecting the committee.

    The issue of Committees had become an albatross on the neck of the Green Chamber, so much so that you rejected your chairmanship of the Solid Minerals Committee. What were your reasons?

    Well, I have already stated my reasons. Being a former principal officer and a senior member of the House, I thought as a democrat, in democracy, consultation is very necessary. So, I think I should have been contacted at least. To work as a committee chairman is to assist Mr. Speaker in running the House. And I think such critical thing, before being appointed, at least you’ll be consulted. Like in the executive arm, the President cannot just announce you without consulting the people that will serve with him. That’s one reason. The other one, I’m a bit worried with the composition, about how the committees were shared. This is a government of change and we have been in the opposition for the last 16 years and the National Assembly has been controlled by the majority party, the PDP. Even in the last House in the 7th Assembly, we supported Aminu Waziri Tambuwal to emerge as Speaker, but at the end of the day, all the critical committees he shared it to his own party members -the PDP, people that did not even vote for him. But we were not worried because we knew they were the majority party and it’s the practice all over the world. In the US, we have 16 standing committees and these 16 standing committees, the Republican Party are in the majority. And all the 16 committees are headed by members of the Republican Party. It’s only the deputy committees that are given to the minority. Though I know our own peculiarities may differ, but you cannot as a party give all the sensitive committees to your opponent. It you can recall, just yesterday the National Publicity Secretary to PDP, Olise Metuh came out to say that all the members of the PDP should brace up and oppose this government.

    So, if you’re giving them such committees, what is the implication? For instance, there is agitation that the committee on PIB should be represented. If this PIB committee is represented, all the three Petroleum Committee were given to PDP members. So what do you think will be the outcome of that type of committee? So these are some of our fears and it portends a lot of danger to this our democracy.

    How does it portend a danger to democracy?

    In democracy, you are elected as a party and each party has its own manifestos. And to achieve that, there must be a synergy between the members of the majority party and the ruling party at the same time. So, if you have given such sensitive committees to the opposition and they’re opposed to your policies, how do you achieve it?

    You can now see what is happening in the United States Congress today Obama has been battling with the US House of Representatives because they control the majority. All his efforts about his health care programmes the Obamacare, aside that, lots of serious problems in the House because the majority of the Congressmen are members of the Republican Party. So, that partisanship, you can’t take it out. Even in the Nigerian Senate, you saw what happened just yesterday (Wednesday). The PDP Caucus held a meeting to, take position on the nominations of Mr. president particularly that of Amaechi. So, you can see the danger of Mr. Speaker giving these kinds of committees to the opposition.

    A member from your state, Sumaila Suleiman was given the committee that you dropped and he accepted it. Is it that you don’t all share the same ideology of philosophy?

    I don’t know. Everybody has his own principle. I have my own and I don’t know of his own he may have his own principle. We don’t have to be the same. But all I know is that I’ve resigned that position as a chairman. Because my primary responsibility here is to represent my constituency and I am doing it exactly without being a committee chairman. It’s not everybody that will be a committee chairman or deputy. More than half of the members will not be committee chairmen or deputies and they will still exist and they will still perform. I don’t think it will affect my representation as a member.

    Don’t you think Nigerians on the streets will see your position on this matter and probably of other members that may toe the same line as a fight for pecuniary gains, rather than representation?

    I don’t know, other may go and fight for positions, but me, I did not ask anyone to give me any of these committees. I feel if I’m qualified I will be given and I have the right to accept it or reject it.

    With the way things are going, with the polarization is this House going to achieve even as much as the last House did?

    Well, I cannot say, I cannot predict what will happen. But all I know, I will continue to work for the interest of my own party that gave me the platform to contest. I will work to achieve that change that we have all been yearning for, so that Nigeria will be a better place for everybody

    If tomorrow the House Leadership or the Speaker calls you to serve in a different committee ad hoc or standing, would you accept?

    Well as I told you, at least if you’re going to give me that responsibility, Speaker is the leader of the House, it will be very good for him to call me and say okay,  Honourable so and so, please I want to give you this assignment, because I feel you can handle it…how do you see it? When he gives me that leverage, if I will do it, I will tell him. If I have anyone that I feel can do it better than myself, I will suggest it to Mr. Speaker. It may be the work is too technical. If I’m not professional in that aspect, I will tell him the truth, I will say Mr. Speaker, this is too technical, I cannot handle it, but we have people that are professionals in that field, why not call this person. I think that’s the best way to approach it. This is democracy, consultation is the basis of any democracy, that’s why democracy is different from dictatorship, we should make consultations, interact and exchange ideas.

    But the Chairman of the House committee on Media and Public Affairs reportedly claimed that all parties were informed especially members of the House leadership before the list was released. He said everyone agreed. Is what you’re saying now not different from that?

    Well I don’t know that one. Al I know is that even Femi Gbajabiamila came out openly to say he was never consulted before the constitution of the committees. Maybe they only announced it in his presence. But he was never consulted for anything. He has said it times without number that he was never consulted before the committees were constituted. I also read it in the papers. You can verify from him.

    What about the claims of the House that they did the selection in line with due process, fairness, justice as well as Federal character?

    Anybody can say that. If that’s how they see their justice and fairness, fine, good luck.