Tag: politics

  • Religion, politics and Nigeria’s future

    Religion, politics and Nigeria’s future

    ON this Christmas, when many newspaper readers feel disinclined to do anything challenging, including reading hard stuff, it is fitting to write on something racy and breezy, something that will not addle the brain or task the distressed minds of the people during a biting recession. Everyone cares about Nigeria’s future, so this column will make reference to it, no matter how cursorily. Nigerians are deeply political; they live and breathe it, even if sometimes misguided. The column will bring it in. Religion is also truly the opium of Nigerians; what would they do or be without it? Therefore, weaving the three issues together in a joyous manner to remind Nigerians who they are and where they are in time should briefly arrest their attention in this dark period of recession, paranoia and apprehension.

    This column may draw flak by suggesting that Nigeria’s problem is chiefly leadership. But hard as it has tried to re-examine that apparently controversial thesis in order to accommodate the counterargument that change indeed could also begin with the followers, not just the leaders, it has been hard to find substance to the counter-thesis. Every Nigerian government has engaged in the delusion that a re-orientation campaign could offer the magical propagandist shot to ginger the people into patriotic fervour. That that campaign has repeatedly failed in the past few decades has not deterred every succeeding government from obsessing with that chimera. The ongoing ‘Change Begins with Me’ campaign will of course naturally fail, but it will not stop the next government from chasing shadows, even if conjured.

    The problem, it seems, is that Nigerian leaders, not to say the people themselves, have no vision of their country’s future. They prefer expediency to structured work. Much worse, both leaders and the led have probably one of the world’s most perverted conceptions of religion, one so skewed and abhorrent it is hard to imagine anything worse. And to add to this stultifying nonsense, they all lack a coherent and sensible ideology of politics. But this column’s preoccupation today is leadership, a factor that continues to undo the country and endanger the future of Nigerians in particular and the black man in general. Former United States president Richard Nixon once proffered the view that, “All the really strong leaders I have known have been highly intelligent, highly disciplined, hard workers, supremely self-confident, driven by a dream, driving others. All have looked beyond the horizon. Some have seen more clearly than others.”

    Highly intelligent, highly disciplined, President Nixon had said thoughtfully. He is right. The reader should, in fact, cast his mind way back to the First Republic and then zoom down to the current Fourth Republic, without excluding or excusing the corrupting intervening military governments. Who among Nigeria’s past leaders fits the bill? Why does anyone expect something to be built on nothing? While for ethnic reasons many Nigerians excuse the appalling failure of their kinsmen in power, and even come to their defence sometimes, the reality is that none of them, Yoruba, Igbo or Hausa/Fulani, has faintly approximated the Nixonian conception of leadership. Not one, and not even now. It is pointless trying to encourage any of them, for no leader can give what he does not have.

    President Nixon was even more unsparing. He says in his book, ‘Leaders’: “The would-be leader without the judgement or perception to make the right decisions fails for lack of vision. The one who knows the right thing but cannot achieve it fails because he is ineffectual. The great leader needs both the vision and the capacity to achieve what is right. He hires managers to help him do so, but only he can set the direction and provide the motive force.” Going further to describe management as prose, and leadership as poetry, President Nixon adds, “The leader necessarily deals to a large extent in symbols, in images, and in the sort of galvanising idea that becomes a force of history…The manager thinks of today and tomorrow. The leader must think of the day after tomorrow. A manager represents a process. The leader represents a direction of history…”

    This column has always argued that a leader without a fiery and transcendent intellect cannot hope to achieve anything substantial or enduring. He must have a brilliant and  instinctive grasp of the complex and interwoven issues his country wrestles with, and a comprehensive appreciation of the other far-reaching issues shaping the world — indeed, an understanding of the spirit of the age. It is only then he can work on those issues and shape or reshape them to fit his vision. What ails Nigerian leaders is their debilitating inability to comprehend the intriguing and sometimes mystifying issues of the day, their lack of discipline, and often their inability to extricate themselves from the primordial issues with which they have become willingly entangled. In short, they have no sense of history, and no sense of where their country should be in the coming decades viz-a-viz other countries. This column posits that no one should attempt to lead a country without first engaging in a deep study of the forces and issues that shaped the character, policies and worldviews of Alexander the Great, Deng Xiaoping, Julius and Augustus Caesar, Winston Churchill, Genghis Khan and Charles de Gaulle, among many others.

    Two qualities are indispensable to a leader. One, the leader himself must possess that innate and intrinsic passion to affect deep and fundamental changes in the society, if not the world. To possess this attribute is to also prequalify himself intellectually and have the ability to appreciate and deconstruct complex issues almost effortlessly. Second, is the need to develop this great and essential attribute by equipping himself with wide-ranging studies of leaders throughout history. China’s Deng did not just happen upon the building blocks of ‘Socialism with Chinese characteristics’, a mixture of ‘socialist ideology with pragmatic market economy’ by chance. Once he developed the idea, he was prepared to suffer for it, and in fact did.

    The point, however, is that whether it pertains to elected governments or military regimes, Nigeria has lacked leaders, not just the right leaders, all of them fifth-rate. When they are not megalomaniacal, they are demagogic. But nothing undermines a country’s destiny more than to be ruled by demagogues devoid of intellect. Consider one or two of Nigeria’s heads of state and presidents. After the death of Gen Sani Abacha, some military generals got together and without a vision of Nigeria and deep understanding of its future and how to guarantee and energise that future, decided to impose Olusegun Obasanjo on the country. The consequences of that imposition are evident in his misshapen policies, his anti-democratic and monarchical measures that saw him deposing governors and enthroning presidents at will, and his braggart attempt at self-perpetuation. His heedless approach to policy and governance, though far better than his successors’ and predecessors’, ensured that after him, Nigeria simply went back to the starting block, bruised, battered and disillusioned.

    Somehow, too, some Nigerian leaders of northern origin, though they espouse sham religiosity, have at various times worked to undermine Nigeria’s secularity, either by covertly pushing the country into the cauldron of religious politics and organisations of the Middle East, or by building a mosque in Aso Villa without a concomitant consideration for a Christian chapel. This column believes that neither a mosque nor a chapel should have been erected at the Villa. But once one was done, it was necessary to erect the other. (The leaders must hope that the day will never come when a shrine for traditional worshippers will be required). Shamefully, it has had to take a Christian president to erect a chapel, demonstrating the smallness of the minds of his predecessors and successors alike, and the disgusting exploitation and misuse of religion. The regime of religious discrimination in the North, mixed with lethal socio-economic factors, inevitably produced an incandescent brew of violence and conflicts that still rages in the region. Till today, short-sighted national and regional leaders still do not appreciate the cause and effect of the multiple religious upheavals convulsing the North and insidiously spreading to other parts of the country.

    If more than two millennial ago, King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon (c. 605 BC – c. 562 BC) could cast the net wide for the recruitment of the next generation of leaders and advisers for the empire, including inducting gifted slaves into the empire’s leadership cadre, it is shocking that President Muhammadu Buhari has constricted his leadership recruitment to his kinsmen, narrowed his definition of democracy, routinely subverted the constitution and the law in the name of desperate and urgent national causes, and fixed his government’s lodestar by a strange and simplistic dualism of good and evil, and wrong and right, which even his predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan, as bad as he was, had trouble embracing. That reprehensible dualism is today alienating a large section of the nation, from the Southeast which is groaning under obnoxious and oppressive measures inspired by Abuja, to the Middle Belt ravaged by herdsmen as the federal government pretends to some concerns, to the militarised states of the South-South which seem to draw the contempt of the federal government, and to the Southwest which is deliberately being divided in order to be ruled in the classical realpolitik sense.

    If Nigeria is to survive, and if democracy is to endure, the country needs to produce the right leaders in 2019. Not the kind of demagogic and supremacist leader Kaduna State projects in Governor Nasir el-Rufai, a man who has unwittingly divided his state along Fulani versus others, Christian versus Muslim, and Muslim sect versus Muslim sect. Given the way Mallam el-Rufai is governing his state, it is clear who he is and what he is capable of, not to talk of the content of his tunnel vision. Not President Buhari who inherited a distressed and mismanaged country suffocating under Dr Jonathan’s parochial and short-sighted measures and policies. Given the way the president has selected his aides, he has unfortunately only managed to widen the cracks, both religious and ethnic, and suggested disingenuously that he would have advanced much more rapidly had the constitution not erected impediments in his path. And not anyone Chief Obasanjo might anoint, for the self-centred ex-president himself has inchoate knowledge of what leadership is all about, and no idea what a wholesome and inspiring vision for the country should be.

    If Nigeria is to gain vibrancy, if divisions are to be healed, if true leadership is to be enthroned in place of paranoia and sectionalism, and if ethnic and religious strife is to be subjugated, Nigeria must carefully examine those who offer themselves for election in 2019. They must vote right. But can they? This column is unsure, for the Nigerian voter has not always demonstrated the detachment and wisdom necessary to put the right people in office, the kind of detachment that downplays ethnic and religious bigotry. So, then, the first challenge is for those who nurse 2019 ambitions to begin selling themselves and their ideas to the country’s six geopolitical zones, recruiting friends and supporters, and interacting with the business, political and religious elites from all parts of the country. They must demonstrate by learning, eloquence and vision that their conception of Nigeria is different from the archaic and schizoid one bandied about by past and present leaders. By personal discipline, character, intuition, intellect and overarching appreciation of the issues of the future and of the moment, not to talk of the demand of office, the would-be Nigerian leader must be able to conceptualise a country able to provide leadership in constitution and law for the rest of Africa, a country destined for prominence and preeminence.

    Above all, the aspiring leader must eschew the disgraceful subservience past Nigerian leaders demand from their subordinates, a subservience that makes aides, heads of institutions, including the security agencies, to measure performance in terms of how much they grovel before the president and please him, a subservience that puts premium on loyalty to the president than loyalty to the country and constitution. It reflects badly on a president when state security agencies attempt to bar or circumscribe discourse and dissent, when they simply ignore the constitutional provisions on fundamental rights and threaten and humiliate the opposition, when aides themselves read the lips and mind of the president before joining debates at executive meetings. There is an absolute need for a new grade and cadre of leadership, for on these hang the future of the country, not on economic policies or job statistics.

    To adopt the sentiment of President Nixon, Nigeria ‘requires leadership of the highest order.’ If in 2019 the country misses this great leadership, the real change and restructuring needed, the inspiring peep into the future without which the country will continue to grope and stumble, and the infusion of great men and women of character and self-confidence prepared to join hands with a truly democratic and far-sighted leader, will be lacking. It is not certain that getting leadership of the highest order can be postponed for much longer without paying a huge and unsustainable price. One thing is, however, certain: the status quo is no longer tenable and does not even make sense.

  • Yoruba and burden of history in the politics of Nigeria – 3

    Restructuring of Nigeria. It is this feeling that makes the Tinubu faction of the APC to be favourably disposed to some form of restructuring of the country and designing a new political, administrative and financial architecture, including fiscal federalism to remove the bogey of domination of one group by the others. The modern political history of the Yoruba, starting appropriately with Awolowo, is known for its contribution of the federal idea to political discourse in Nigeria.  Implicit in this is that no one group or state should be big enough to dominate or overwhelm all others put together. This is basic to Professor John Wheare’s ‘Principle of Federalism’. The federal principle has now been bought even by some segments of the northern political leadership. The Igbos who were previously deluded about national unity and unitary government, have now bought into the federal idea and the minorities, especially those in the Niger Delta, seem to be on board for selfish economic reasons.

    The force of our history in Yorubaland compels us to lead the way of restructuring along proper federal lines, because it is good for the Federal Republic of Nigeria and it is good for Yorubaland. Chief Awolowo, while pushing the federal idea during the struggle for independence, said one can be a Yoruba patriot and Nigerian nationalist at the same time. I agree that there should be no conflict between patriotism and nationalism. What shape the restructuring should take, will have to be negotiated. Awolowo wanted all Yorubas including those in Kwara, Kogi and Edo to be in one state. It is a good idea but it is apparently unrealisable. What is possible is not reversion to the old three or four regions but a restructure based on economic viability and not the present states of misery and beggary, where salaries are not paid and all resources are gulped up by administrative excesses and political extravaganza. Perhaps we should go back to Gowon’s 12-state structure with a heavy dose of economic viability, and superimposed on it should be the principle of fiscal federalism where each state would survive on its own economic bootstrap.

    The present situation of the centre, creating states and local governments is not only absurd but an anomaly which contradicts the essence of federalism. In normal federations like Canada, Belgium, Switzerland and the United States, it is the states that create and fund the federal government and not the other way round. When we embraced the federal idea in Nigeria in 1957, the states funded the federal government and this was so until the military took over government and shaped the country in its own military- unitary way of command. Peace has eluded us since then and we must go back to the period of correct relations between the centre and the periphery in terms of viable state structure. This is the challenge facing Yoruba and Nigerian politics now and in the future. All stake holders, including traditional rulers like our Obas must be engaged in finding a path for the Yoruba in the politics of Nigeria.

    Role of obas and traditional institutions.

    I have once described Nigeria as a republic of a thousand kings which sounds contradictory, because monarchies ordinarily should not co-exist with a republic. When faced with this problem, India simply abolished the various kingdoms ruled by powerful Maharajahs, but left them with their considerable wealth. No one can do the same and survive in Nigeria. In the past, politicians have removed powerful rulers like Alaafin Adeyemi 1, by the Awolowo government in western Nigeria in 1954. Sarkin Kano Muhammad Sanusi was in 1962 removed by the Sir Ahmadu Bello government and General Sani Abacha’s government removed the Sultan of Sokoto, Ibrahim Dasuki in 1994. Some of the Obas suffered their salaries being withheld or reduced to pennies during the time of Chief S.L Akintola’s government in western Nigeria. It is however unlikely that any Nigerian ruler at the centre or the state will be strong enough to abolish an institution which the people still support and venerate. In fact, many of the new rulers are eager to bid for the traditional thrones whenever there are vacancies.

    Traditional rulers still provide rallying points for the people’s mobilisation especially in the rural areas. They also provide channels of communication between governments and citizens. They are also in some cases religious leaders of their communities. This is more apparent in the Islamic Emirates of the north. But it is no less obvious in Yorubaland, where in spite of whatever monotheistic religion an Oba may profess, he still has to carry out religious obligations binding him to the land, the people and the ancestors. In Ife in particular, no single day goes without the Ooni or his priests propitiating the local gods for one thing or the other. In times of danger, people are more likely to look towards the palace than to an elected politician. The Oba’s position is so formidable that politicians know that their support is necessary for electoral success. Obas are regarded as vice-regal to the Almighty. They are not to be argued with or questioned, “Kabio kosi” Or Kabiyesi. They are in the case of Oyo, supposed to have power of life and death (Iku Baba Yeye). This awesomeness of power and influence are most noticeable and glaring in modern Bini, where the Oba is virtually worshiped. Even in an apparently republican Ibadan, the influence of the Olubadan is growing incrementally. The considerable power wielded by Obas in Yorubaland must also come with responsibility.

    Power goes with responsibility!

    This is going to be the greatest challenge to the institution of Obaship in these days of modernisation. Some of the young Obas coming to the throne must learn to keep intact the mystic and mystery surrounding the institution. They must avoid being seen at every party and social events behaving like ordinary people. Once this becomes the pattern, they will lose all respect and loyalty of the people. This behoves on them to maintain a reasonable distance from the Hoi polloi of the land and stay away from the corrupting influence of money and republican ethics of trade and commerce. Obas, no matter how young are regarded as fathers of the people in Yorubaland. This is why older people must bow, prostrate and kneel down before rulers young enough to be their children. Respect is not to the person of the ruler but to the institution. I remember visiting my cousin, the Oba of our town and prostrating for someone who was a friend, cousin and school mate of mine but who in return wanted to hug me, I however told him he could no longer do that. He asked me why? I promptly told him he carried all the power of our ancestors the moment he went through the process of coronation. He smiled and understood me.

    In conclusion, I have pointed out how the history of Yorubaland has affected and is affecting Yoruba politics internally among the people, and externally with the rest of Nigeria, especially the North. It is suggested that the excision of Ilorin from the rest of Yorubaland has been a sore point, but that we should let bye gone be bye gone and realistically deal with the issue politically by forging links with the Kwara and Kogi modern political leaders, instead of harking back to the past. We must not allow the burden of history to wear us out and weigh us down and to determine the trajectory of our future politics and political alignment at the centre. We have also suggested that the ideology of progressivism should help in breaking down north/south dichotomy in Nigeria, as is the case in the current APC party imperfect as it may appear. We are also suggesting that no matter the political differences in Yoruba land we must conduct our politics with tact, civility and decorum characteristic of an ‘Omoluabi’. We have also suggested that for a long time to come, traditional political leaders, as constituted by the Obas will continue to have a role to play in Yoruba politics and that for the institution to endure, those occupying the traditional thrones must preserve the mystic and the mystery of their posts, lest familiarity breeds contempt.

    • Concluded.
  • TIME TO ESCHEW POLITICS IN TOURISM SECTOR

    THERE is no doubt that at the moment, we are in search of our lost glory (if we’d had any at all) in the area of culture and tourism. And with the recent sack of Sally Mbanefo as Director General of Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC), Nigerian government must prove to us that it has turned a new leaf from playing politics with our national heritage. I dare say that the years of Sally Mbanefo as D.G of NTDC was a colossal waste, in the same way that the film industry has been thrown into total darkness in the hands of its current Managing Director, Danjuma Dadu.

    There is no doubt that the bane of art, culture and tourism in Nigeria is having the wrong people in the right places. And unless the government of Muhammadu Buhari is paying lip service to its much touted diversification of the Nigerian economy, the time is now to guard entertainment and tourism jealously, as the hen with the potential to lay the golden egg.

    My thoughts on how astern culture and tourism in Nigeria has been was rekindled by the opening in NTDC, and just as I once posited that filmmaker Kunle Afolayan is a cultural man to the core, another man who is tourism personified, is Ikechi Uko. For Mr. Uko, Founder of the world famous Akwaaba Expo and 2015 Africa’s Tourism Ambassador by America-based African Sun Times, I stand in the gap for history, and do hope that the powers that be will consider merit and not sentiment in their choice of a new D.G for the NTDC.

    Before I go briefly into the profile of Uko, let me open our minds to what culture and tourism can do to the economy of Nigeria, using the indices of a small country called The Gambia.

    The first time I visited The Gambia, I was stunned by the number of immigrants trooping in and out of that country. It was not for the long bread and tea which appears to be the only thing produced in that country, but for holidaying. Indeed, the country is said to import such surpluses that we have in Nigeria like eggs, garri, yam and rice among other food stuff.

    The Gambian economy is predominantly dependent on tourism. And what does the country sell other than beach resorts that thrive on a serene environment, clean waters, scorching sun and adequate security for revelers. Lagos, for example, has more, with potential even for more of these qualities, when you consider its entertainment centers, historical sites, cultural events, natural landscape and topography traversed by sea and lagoon waters, enormous beaches and waterfronts, sea foods and other numerous delicacies that define a true metropolitan city. The missing gap has been the inability of leaders to harness these beauties for the all-important social and economic benefits. Apart from The Gambia, South Africa, Kenya and Tanzania are also making a kill from culture and tourism. But how do we market our made in Nigerian goods when we have refused to brand them for marketing? How do we market the Erin Ijesha Water Falls, Gurara Water Falls, the Oguta Water Confluence when we have not thought of developing them? How do we market the Argungu Fishing Festival in the North; Calabar Carnival in the South-South and Osun Osogbo Festival in the South-West when we don’t see the national importance in them? While thinking of bailouts for the current recession, it is only wise to consider the fact that culture and tourism alone is capable of feeding Nigeria.

    One State in Nigeria that is taking the lead in tourism is Cross River, and only this year, its Governor, Ben Ayade, was named Tourism Man of the Year for Nigeria and West Africa, beating contenders which include the Minister of Tourism for Ghana, the Minister of Tourism for the Gambia and Obinna Ekezie, MD of Wakanow.

    It is pertinent to state here that one of the people instrumental to Ayade’s feat is Uko, who only last year was reappointed by the governor as consultant for the international aspect of the carnival in which 11 countries participated.

    Uko, a Nigerian travel business consultant, travel promoter, tourism development expert, media consultant, journalist and author, comes across to me as the man with the right exposure and connection. He is the organiser of Abuja Bantaba and Akwaaba African Travel Market; the only international travel fair in West Africa; Project Director of Seven Wonders of Nigeria (Naija7Wonders), and CEO of Jedidah Promotions (an international media and tourism marketing firm for airlines, hotels and destinations across Africa) and publisher of Africa Travel Quarterly Magazine and atqnews.com.

    Wikipedia describes Uko as a very well-traveled person, traveling close to 200 days in a year.

    In 2008, he was appointed a member of the tourism committee for Nigeria Vision 2020 by the administration of President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua.

    Ikechi Uko is presently pushing his proposal to build an aviation museum for Nigeria, using abandoned aircraft as exhibits. He said that the project would promote Nigeria’s tourism; empower and educate a new generation of aviators; draw international investors in the aviation industry to Nigeria and serve as an “eye-opener” to look and work for a brighter future in the aviation industry.

  • Yoruba and burden of history in the politics of Nigeria – 3

    Restructuring of Nigeria. It is this feeling that makes the Tinubu faction of the APC to be favourably disposed to some form of restructuring of the country and designing a new political, administrative and financial architecture, including fiscal federalism to remove the bogey of domination of one group by the others. The modern political history of the Yoruba, starting appropriately with Awolowo is known for its contribution of the federal idea to political discourse in Nigeria.  Implicit in this is that no one group or state should be big enough to dominate or overwhelm all others put together. This is basic to Professor John Wheare’s ‘Principle of Federalism’. The federal principle has now been bought even by some segments of the northern political leadership. The Igbos who were previously deluded about national unity and unitary government, have now bought into the federal idea and the minorities, especially those in the Niger Delta, seem to be on board for selfish economic reasons.

    The force of our history in Yorubaland compels us to lead the way of restructuring along proper federal lines, because it is good for the Federal Republic of Nigeria and it is good for Yorubaland. Chief Awolowo, while pushing the federal idea during the struggle for independence, said one can be a Yoruba patriot and Nigerian nationalist at the same time. I agree that there should be no conflict between patriotism and nationalism. What shape the restructuring should take, will have to be negotiated. Awolowo wanted all Yorubas including those in Kwara, Kogi and Edo to be in one state. It is a good idea but it is apparently unrealisable. What is possible is not reversion to the old three or four regions but a restructure based on economic viability and not the present states of misery and beggary, where salaries are not paid and all resources are gulped up by administrative excesses and political extravaganza. Perhaps we should go back to Gowon’s 12-state structure with a heavy dose of economic viability, and superimposed on it should be the principle of fiscal federalism where each state would survive on its own economic bootstrap.

    The present situation of the centre, creating states and local governments is not only absurd but an anomaly which contradicts the essence of federalism. In normal federations like Canada, Belgium, Switzerland and the United States, it is the states that create and fund the federal government and not the other way round. When we embraced the federal idea in Nigeria in 1957, the states funded the federal government and this was so until the military took over government and shaped the country in its own military- unitary way of command. Peace has eluded us since then and we must go back to the period of correct relations between the centre and the periphery in terms of viable state structure. This is the challenge facing Yoruba and Nigerian politics now and in the future. All stake holders, including traditional rulers like our Obas must be engaged in finding a path for the Yoruba in the politics of Nigeria.

    Role of Obas and traditional institutions

    I have once described Nigeria as a republic of a thousand kings which sounds contradictory, because monarchies ordinarily should not co-exist with a republic. When faced with this problem, India simply abolished the various kingdoms ruled by powerful Maharajahs, but left them with their considerable wealth. No one can do the same and survive in Nigeria. In the past, politicians have removed powerful rulers like Alaafin Adeyemi 1, by the Awolowo government in western Nigeria in 1954. Sarkin Kano Muhammad Sanusi was in 1962 removed by the Sir Ahmadu Bello government and General Sanni Abacha’s government removed the Sultan of Sokoto, Ibrahim Dasuki in 1994. Some of the Obas suffered their salaries being withheld or reduced to pennies during the time of Chief S.L Akintola’s government in western Nigeria. It is however unlikely that any Nigerian ruler at the centre or the state will be strong enough to abolish an institution which the people still support and venerate. In fact, many of the new rulers are eager to bid for the traditional thrones whenever there are vacancies.

    Traditional rulers still provide rallying points for the people’s mobilisation especially in the rural areas. They also provide channels of communication between governments and citizens. They are also in some cases religious leaders of their communities. This is more apparent in the Islamic Emirates of the north. But it is no less obvious in Yorubaland, where in spite of whatever monotheistic religion an Oba may profess, he still has to carry out religious obligations binding him to the land, the people and the ancestors. In Ife in particular, no single day goes without the Ooni or his priests propitiating the local gods for one thing or the other. In times of danger, people are more likely to look towards the palace than to an elected politician. The Oba’s position is so formidable that politicians know that their support is necessary for electoral success. Obas are regarded as vice-regal to the Almighty. They are not to be argued with or questioned, “Kabio kosi” Or Kabiyesi. They are in the case of Oyo, supposed to have power of life and death (Iku Baba Yeye). This awesomeness of power and influence are most noticeable and glaring in modern Bini, where the Oba is virtually worshiped. Even in an apparently republican Ibadan, the influence of the Olubadan is growing incrementally. The considerable power wielded by Obas in Yorubaland must also come with responsibility.

    Power goes with responsibility!

    This is going to be the greatest challenge to the institution of Obaship in these days of modernisation. Some of the young Obas coming to the throne must learn to keep intact the mystic and mystery surrounding the institution. They must avoid being seen at every party and social events behaving like ordinary people. Once this becomes the pattern, they will lose all respect and loyalty of the people. This behoves on them to maintain a reasonable distance from the Hoi polloi of the land and stay away from the corrupting influence of money and republican ethics of trade and commerce. Obas, no matter how young are regarded as fathers of the people in yorubaland. This is why older people must bow, prostrate and kneel down before rulers young enough to be their children. Respect is not to the person of the ruler but to the institution. I remember visiting my cousin, the Oba of our town and prostrating for someone who was a friend, cousin and school mate of mine but who in return wanted to hug me, I however told him he could no longer do that. He asked me why? I promptly told him he carried all the power of our ancestors the moment he went through the process of coronation. He smiled and understood me.

    In conclusion, I have pointed out how the history of Yorubaland has affected and is affecting Yoruba politics internally among the people, and externally with the rest of Nigeria, especially the North. It is suggested that the excision of Ilorin from the rest of Yorubaland has been a sore point, but that we should let bye gone be bye gone and realistically deal with the issue politically by forging links with the Kwara and Kogi modern political leaders, instead of harking back to the past. We must not allow the burden of history to wear us out and weigh us down and to determine the trajectory of our future politics and political alignment at the centre. We have also suggested that the ideology of progressivism should help in breaking down north/south dichotomy in Nigeria, as is the case in the current APC party imperfect as it may appear. We are also suggesting that no matter the political differences in Yoruba land we must conduct our politics with tact, civility and decorum characteristic of an ‘Omoluabi’. We have also suggested that for a long time to come, traditional political leaders, as constituted by the Obas will continue to have a role to play in Yoruba politics and that for the institution to endure, those occupying the traditional thrones must preserve the mystic and the mystery of their posts, lest familiarity breeds contempt.

  • Rivers rerun and do-or-die politics

    The treasure base of the nation, Rivers will on December 10 host the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in respect of rerun elections into the National Assembly which was earlier quashed by the court. Major contenders emanated from the two dominant political parties in the country; All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples’ Democratic Party (Party).  And as notoriously known of the metropolis, tensions, threats of brimstones, of bury alive, of slay and dry, of cultists’ annihilations and others have continued to gather momentum. Luckily, Ondo State governorship election held on Saturday November 26, has set a positive precedent that elections can actually be conducted in a civilized manner instead of opting up for bizarre. The electorates, candidates and the electoral officials proved to the world that Nigeria is no longer a nascent democracy. The upcoming election in Rivers must not witness further bloodshed or grotesquely odd remarks. Violence, forcefulness or belligerency is never a characteristic of democracy as peddled to some folks in some quarters. Succinctly, it is intellectual pursuit for power, and definably, the act of selecting the representatives of the people in free and fair manners purposely for good governance.

    Elections ought to not be a do or die affair as witnessed in previous elections in the state to an extent that a prominent indigene under the cloak of political bullying was beheaded and displayed as Olympic Cup’s trophy. Undeniably, this is symptomatic of psychosis. What an inhumanity to man; parading a fellow human’s head in pool of blood publicly on account of mere political affiliations – APC, PDP, APGA, AD, Labour or any other party? Imagine the trauma and fate of the family the beheaded-politician left behind, and numerous others that lost lives during political struggles between APC and PDP rivals.

    Today, the two arrowheads, Minister of Transport, Rotimi Amaechi and the state governor, Nyesom Wike are believably akin to then Iraq and Iran; while the grassroots parochially fight for them, crossing boundaries and cutting down barriers, unknown to them, by the indisputable feature of our politics, they may be later witness the two leaders eventually in one party dining together in the nearest future. All it may take is just a closed-door meeting in a five star hotel in United Kingdom or United States of America with few other bigwigs. At that point, those that grossly bullied opponents, beheaded fellow indigenes, killed political opponents, kidnapped or committed other atrocities of intimidation will be left alone. The deeds by then had been already done and cannot be reversed. Or does anyone assume that Amaechi and Wike will remain in opposing political parties for life? Absolutely not. Rivers people should emulate the people of Ondo State and maintain amity and decorum. Whoever wins is a victory for democracy and for the state. Enough of political extremism, mediocrity, terrorization, hedonism and debauchery!

    At the moment, the state is administratively under Governor Wike’s control, and therefore, should as the political leader proactively douse all the political tensions in the state. Politics is not a do or die affair and political statements must reflect maturity, decency and administrative know-hows. What is vital is to conduct a free and fair election. No political party ever emerged both a winner and loser at the same time and any democracy must be characterized by victory and defeat. The finest priority any selfless leader could set on motion is to ensure that the will of the people take superiority in sync with Section 14 (2) (b) of the 1999 Nigeria’s Constitution which provides that “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government”. Hence, any government that creates unwarranted scenes that are inconsistent is anti-people, anti-democracy and agent of destruction. Some roads particularly inner roads even in Port Harcourt are, for instance in horrible shapes and some deserted by owners of the properties within the area due to inaccessibility alongside other amenities in shambles. The resources for arming political thugs could be judiciously channeled to that direction. At this juncture, violence-free election mantra should be amplified by the leaders from both sides rather than incitingly making the people misappropriate values on anyhow victories just for peanuts. Any adventures that recklessly waste human lives are calamitous. Democracy itself is strictly centered on people’s wellbeing, improvement and empowerment, and never programmed for obliteration. Rivers residents must shun all aberrations knowing that all political parties in the country are identical including manifestoes. Hence, politicking must be conducted within the ambits of civility and laws.

    Regrettably, the same politicians that make things happen today in a particular party may defect and assume leadership positions in another without consultation or even intimating the grassroots aficionadas. If violence-free election could be witnessed in Ondo, it can be done in Rivers too. All the public funds earmarked to service and make thugs combatant-ready from both sides should be converted for their empowerment particularly as recession has dealt a big blow on low income earners. Above all, imperative to note that lethal weapons provided to thugs, mercenaries and feasible assassins during elections are rarely withdrawn same way ‘giving a cup of water to a monkey is no big deal but to retrieve it’. Without a doubt, political leaders could maximally protect themselves with security aides, drive in bullet-proofs, and sleep in-between combatant soldiers with latest sophisticated security gadgets. However, their helpless relatives, friends and colleagues might be the victims of attacks with these weapons after the election. Let all stakeholders keep to the rules of the game.  A fascinating attribute of democracy is time limit; whoever wins has a specified period in office, thus, needless of do or die.

     

    • Umegboro is a public affairs analyst and publisher.
  • This thing called politics (2)

    Chukwu and Anthony need no soothsayer to tell them that their boss is in a very sad mood. As they look at his blood-shot eyes, all they see is sadness. His Excellency does not believe in the saying that you win some and lose some. He always wants to win all.

    After about one minute of silence, Chukwu offers some pieces of advice: “Sir, I think we should organise a church service for the flag off campaign of 2016 re-run/supplementary election at an Anglican Church. There, the governor will urge the Electoral Commission (EC) to ensure that the will of the people prevails.

    “The governor should say this election will prove whether or not the EC is ready to conduct free and fair elections. We should also use it as an opportunity to say that the UPP remains committed to violence-free elections. We should stress that we will resist any attempt to write results. We should portray the CPC as the one eager to write results.”

    Ekiw maintains his silence. Anthony jumps in: “We should also get the Waters State House of Assembly to pass a resolution  calling on the Inspector-General of Police  to immediately transfer the State Assistant Commissioner of Police ( ACP)  in charge of Operations, Asshole Stevo,  and the Commander of Special Anti-Robbery Squad  (SARS ), Ifankaleluya Akinkorede for being  partisan. The House should also pass a resolution pleading with the National Assembly to investigate the two police officers and take necessary action. The House should accuse the duo of opening fire on UPP supporters who were on peaceful procession to the Assembly and aiding the invasion of the Government House by CPC supporters who wanted to cause violent change of government in a democracy.”

    He continues: “We should add that the duo got 16 Divisional Police Officers to assist them attack our supporters who were on peaceful procession. We should let the House make it clear that this amounts to a coup against the Waters people and the government they elected freely.”

    Anthony’s bid to continue talking is interrupted by the sudden vomiting by Ekiw. His Excellency is soon swimming in his own vomit. His system has obviously had more than its share of wine for one day. Anthony and Chukwu rally round the governor; pulls his caftan and cleans him up. They make him lie down on the couch.

    “Let me go for new caftan for him,” Chuwku says and disappears through the door. Anthony stays back to monitor the boss whose eyes are now wide shut.

    Some minutes later, Chukwu returns with the caftan and Mimi, His Excellency’s daughter and conscience-in-chief.

    Mimi looks at her father and shakes her head. Anthony and Chukwu look at her and wonder why she is shaking her head. She keeps her gaze on her father for some more time feeling like waking him up and telling him that man shall not live by bread alone.

    She soon shifts her attention to Anthony and Chukwu. She shakes her head looking at them. She makes up her mind to give them a piece of her mind.

    “When will this whole charade end?” she says to no one in particular.

    Anthony and Chukwu are taken aback. They wonder what she is driving at.

    “I know my father is a strong man, a very strong man but that is a problem. We don’t need strong men. Like President Barack Obama once said, what Africa needs are strong institutions.”

    Looking at Anthony, she says: “Sir, I think you can help my father. Tell him the truth always. I know he can be stubborn but it is not all the time that you simply tell him what he wants to hear. A lot of nonsense is going on around here. I am not saying the opposition are blameless but this is a truth I can only admit in the closet like this, my father is crude. His ways baffle me. There are things he has done since he became governor that I have confirmed myself and I am ashamed of him.”

    Chukwu and Anthony are baffled at the kind of words coming from Mimi about her father. But she simply behaves as if their concern means nothing and continues airing her views: “The other day I saw on television supposed ex-militants handing over guns and all kinds of weapons all in the name of Waters State Amnesty Programme, a poor imitation of the laudable programme started by the late Yar’Adua. When I looked closely at some of the boys handing over the guns, I laughed and also felt like crying at the same time. I know some of those boys and I am sure that you also know them. They are your boys and that gives me the feeling that this whole programme is nothing but charade. I have also wondered what becomes of the guns. They are either supposed to be handed over to the security agents or destroyed publicly.”

    Mimi pauses, looks at her father once more and then shifts her attention to Chukwu and Anthony.

    “What sort of happiness comes from intrigues? I have tried to answer this question times and times again, especially since my father became governor and I have not been able to.”

    Chukwu chooses to interrupt her at this stage.

    “Mimi, the situation is not exactly like you have painted it,” he says and tries to continue but Mimi cuts him short.

    “I do not expect you to agree with me because you are not the one whose father all because of a failed political misadventure soaked himself in alcohol and vomited all over. You are not the one whose classmates ask frequently ‘why is your father described as wicked?’ You are not the one who feels bad each time her father goes to a church and makes political statements filled with malice. You are not the one who wonders what manner of a politician her father is. Are you?”

    Before anyone can say anything, Mimi drops another bombshell: “This thing called politics, especially the brand played by my father and his disciples like you, has no conscience and that is why you guys can just wake up and decide to pick on a number of political opponents and go after them for murders you have no evidence they committed.”

    Mimi soon storms out of the office but not without telling Chukwu and Anthony: “I will not forgive you if anything happens to my father because you encourage him in his politics without conscience.”

    They remain silent until Ekiw wakes up.  He makes his way to the bathroom attached to the office. Wearing only his birth clothing, he opens the shower and stays under it for the next twenty minutes. As he stays under the water, his mind wonders to those days when he first got married, those days when he used to shower with his wife together, those days when the kids had not come and they were free to pull each other’s clothes anywhere in their apartment and merge like souls jailed by passions. He also remembers his sojourn into politics; his ascension to the office of the council chairman; his stint as a minister; his time as a governor’s principal officer; and how he thought he could not be governor; and all the battles he had to fight to be governor. He also thinks about the battles he is still fighting to keep the coveted seat.

    He forces himself out of the shower after the memories begin to look as though out to kill him there. He wears the new caftan from Chukwu. He returns to the office and sits on the couch. His men say nothing. After some minutes, something comes to his mind and he asks a question: “Was Mimi here? I felt I heard her voice.”

    Both men look at each other. No one is willing to admit the truth lest he is forced to recount the gospel according to Mimi. Some things are better left unsaid, each says to himself. There is nothing left to talk about. Chukwu and Anthony take their leave.

  • Yoruba and burden of history in the politics of Nigeria – 3

    During the struggle for power in western Nigeria before independence, political affiliation reflected the fault line of the civil wars in Yorubaland. The Oyo people mostly followed the lead of Alhaji Adegoke Adelabu into the NCNC (National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons), while non-Oyo people in rural Ekiti, Ijesha, Igbomina and Ife voted with the Action Group. In fact the aggressive boisterousness of Adelabu (penkelemesi), sometimes reminded people of the hurly burly days of Oyo domination of Yorubaland. There were however urban areas like Ilesha, Akure, Ondo, Ado-Ekiti and Ikare which largely voted for the NCNC. This may of course be because since 1944, the NCNC had already been planted into the consciousness of the urbanised Yoruba in these towns. The urban areas were also where educational institutions were located and missionary enterprise was at its highest in its impact. Hence, the control and influence of the Obas and traditional institutions were on the wane. This point is important because the Action Group was heavily dependent on the Obas as guardians of the home of Oduduwa. The party itself had sprung out of the Egbe Omo Oduduwa.

    Crisis and division in Yoruba politics

    Crisis seems to be a second nature in politics. Earlier in the politics of Lagos, the NYM had broken up when in 1941 there was a vacancy in the then legislative council of Nigeria and Earnest Ikoli, an Ijaw wanted to contest and he was backed by most of the important Yoruba leaders in Lagos, including the up and coming Obafemi Awolowo based in Ibadan. Nnamdi Azikiwe and others supported Samuel Akisanya who later became Odemo of Ishara. Azikiwe ironically branded supporters of Ikoli as tribalists. It was a complicated story in which Awolowo would end up being branded a tribalist for supporting an Ijaw man against an Ijebu man who was seen as a proxy of an Ibo man. This was to be the harbinger of future political divisions in Yorubaland.

    When the crisis in the Action Group broke out in 1962, it invariably took the form of the Oyo against non-Oyo. This was of course due to the exploitation of history by Chief S. L. Akintola, an Ogbomosho man, who used everything he had to survive a bitter political battle with an Ijebu man. The Ijebu generally attracted hostility to themselves because of their history of blocking for economic reasons, the route to the coast against the Ibadan in the 19th century. Thus, all Ijebu people were seen as closet opponents of the Oyo speaking people. In spite of Awolowo having lived most of his life in Ibadan, he was never totally accepted as an Ibadan man. The same tendency was witnessed during the second republic, when the titans of Ibadan politics like Chief Adisa Akinloye and R. A. Akinjide went against the general trend in Yorubaland of supporting Awolowo and his UPN. This was the continuation of the antagonism between the Awolowo and Akintola factions of Yoruba politics.

    This division seems to have continued until recently. Leading figures of the previous ruling party in Nigeria, the PDP (Peoples Democratic Party), in the South- west were mostly remnants of the Akintola tradition in Yoruba politics. In the current dispensation of the fourth republic, those who found their political home in the PDP could be traced to the NPC and NPN, while those in the AD/ACN/APC, can be traced largely to the Action Group and the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN). The political division and tendency in Yorubaland appears frozen for all times.

    The Ilorin and Fulani factors in Yoruba politics

    The Akintola tendency is seen in terms of a replay of Yoruba politics of Afonja’s betrayal of the Alaafin, and his own betrayal by Alimi and his son Abdul Salaam. Association with the Fulani regarded as Yoruba’s traditional enemies is seen as betrayal of Yoruba cause and interest. This is because of the 19th century seizure of Ilorin by Abdul Salaam, the son of Sheikh Alimi the Fulani cleric, who came to Ilorin as an itinerant preacher and was tolerated by Afonja the Are Ona Kakanfo of Oyo. Afonja was betrayed when the Muslim ummah in Ilorin, led by Abdul Salaam raised the flag of revolt against Afonja and Oyo, during which Afonja was killed and Ilorin became independent of Oyo and became an emirate under the Sokoto caliphate. The Ilorin episode has not been completely appreciated by historians. First of all, the coming of Muslims to Ilorin and Oyo itself during the 18th century, introduced Islam into the empire which undermined the imperial religion of Sango, which was a deification of the 15th century Alaafin. Many people in the empire were converted to Islam thus releasing them from loyalty to the Alaafin.

    The Are Ona Kakanfo Afonja himself may have been a closet Muslim or perhaps he wanted to use the Muslims to bid for the throne himself. He was therefore riding the tiger only to find himself inside it. Some of those who fought with Abdul Salaam were Yoruba generals like Solagberu, who was a Muslim and saw the conflict as a jihad against non-believers. The upshot of the Ilorin episode was that Oyo was destroyed from within by the coming of Islam. Modern Yoruba people, however, see the Ilorin seizure as a humiliation of the Yoruba and any political leader associating with the north was immediately branded another Afonja who allied with foreigners to betray the Alaafin and the Yoruba. This is in spite of the fact that for 16 years, virtually the whole of non-Oyo speaking Yoruba people were fighting against Oyo/Ibadan imperialism in the 19th century. In that fight, the Ekiti Parapo confederacy of the Ekiti, Ijesha, Igbomina, Akoko, and Ife allied themselves with the Ilorin in their resistance against the Oyo/Ibadan forces which were also fighting Ilorin.

    The sense of pan Yoruba feeling was not there yet and it did not really develop until the late 1940s. This had to be deliberately nurtured by Chief Awolowo, through the founding of the Egbe Omo Oduduwa in 1947 which metamorphosed into the Action Group in 1951. Before that time, the ethnic horizon of most Yoruba did not go beyond being Ekiti, Ijesha or Ijebu, Owu, Oyo, Igbomina and so on. We can therefore say politics created the pan Yoruba feeling, but ironically, the living history of the Yoruba undermined that pan Yoruba feeling. The result is that until the brief near unanimity of Yoruba support for Chief Awolowo’s Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) in 1979, Yoruba people have always spoken with several political tongues, thus, reminding one of General Charles de Gaulle’s dismissive description of the French people that if you lock up two of them in a room to form a political party they will come up with three. This is what some have called the curse of politics in Yorubaland. But is it really something to be deprecated in a plural society like Nigeria? Will it not be good for Yoruba people and Nigeria as a whole if we encourage the blooming of a million political flowers in our country? If we all sleep facing the same place, how will we be able to see other directions? There is nothing wrong with Yoruba people coming up with several ideas, options and directions about who to associate with. What we should plead against is violence arising from political differences.

    The sore point of Ilorin’s political and administrative but not cultural separation from Yorubaland need not divide people of the same culture and language. Ilorin province, including the great town of Offa, is however still part of Nigeria and whatever boundary separating it from the rest of Yorubaland is mere administrative convenience. It is not as bad as that separating Sabe, Ajase, and Ketu now in the Republic of Benin from the rest of Yorubaland. In recent times, the people of Yoruba tongue there have found it important to visit and associate with the wider Yoruba world of Ogun State. It is surprising that in spite of French colonial assimilationist policy to obliterate the African culture, the Yorubas in Benin have survived and the institution of Obaship has thrived.

    Under the current political dispensation in Nigeria, in which political forces in Yoruba land and the north are allied, questions have been asked whether this constitutes a break with the past. What is the difference between the opportunistic politics of Akintola, allying himself with the north to survive and Bola Ahmed Tinubu, allying with Muhammadu Buhari now? They ask. The answer is of course that this alliance was presumably negotiated between apparently equal factions of the political elite. Although, the parochialism if not nepotism, characterising most of President Buhari’s appointments gives one concern. The Yoruba should deprecate this tendency and refuse to participate in it, but only demanding what justly belongs to it. Yoruba people’s concept of “Omoluabi” is a belief in fairness and equity. This will not allow them to collude with the Hausas and Fulanis to corner all appointments and resources, without equitable sharing of them with other ethnic groups in Nigeria.

  • This thing called politics (1)

    Ekiw Moseyn is staring at the wine cup sitting on the coffee table as he learns of the police’s resolve to thwart his latest action against his arch-rival and ex-boss Timiro Ihcema.

    “The CP is really working against us,” his aide Simeone Okah says over the phone. “He is supposed to be taking instructions from the Chief Security Officer and no one else. What sort of federal system are we practicing that the CP takes orders elsewhere? We caught these people read-handed. The evidence is good enough to prove that they are guilty. So, why are they messing around with us? We should not give up.”

    Simeone pauses, giving Ekiw some time to chew on the latest information. “We should always be a step ahead of them,” he continues. “This state is ours and no one must be allowed to take it from us. This rerun is ours to win and nothing must stop that. We must continue to make noise about those bandits we found with fake result sheets so that the world will bear us witness.”

    “Thank you for your support,” Ekiw says. He imagines how many people he has been able to sell the lie to as gospel truth.

    “We just have to show them we are in charge. And what better way is there to do that than trouncing them election after election?” Simeon says and Ekiw wonders about the extent he has gone to keep Waters State in the grip of the Umbrella Peoples Party (UPP).

    For the next fifteen minutes, Simeon talks about how the president is allowing Timiro to ride roughshod over the state; how the economy is getting worse and not much is being done to bring it to normalcy; how gari is gradually getting off the grip of the poor; how rice is almost becoming a special delicacy only meant for special occasions; and how the president, in the midst of all these, is allowing his minister to use security agencies to undermine the governor of his state.

    As he goes on and on, Ekiw listens and talks less. He does not tell Simeone that the president alone is not to blame for the dwindling economic fortunes. He does not remind him that Timiro is only fighting back like a real politician should do. He simply allows his aide have his way. With a promise to reflect on their discussion and get back to him-a promise he has no plan of keeping- he hangs up.

    He stands from the swivel chair he has sat in the last thirty minutes or so of the call. He parts the window blind and looks at the expansive compound that is his office. He catches a glimpse of the huge diesel tank, the one he earlier in the life of his administration accused Timiro of stealing its content. He smiles as this thought comes to his mind.

    “This game of politics,” he says aloud.

    He walks into the toilet, pulls his trousers and sits on the water closet and stays there for some three minutes without anything being discharged. He wears his trousers back, cleans his hands with soap and returns to the office. There his attention catches an oil-on-canvas painting on the wall. He has no idea what the artist had in mind. All he sees are colours splash all over a board. He imagines how many people really understand these oil-on-canvas paintings. He remembers his argument with a friend back in the university. He had told the friend that oil-on-canvas was nothing but a reflection of the confused state of mind of the artist drawing it. They had argued on and on.

    The immediate past soon pays him a visit and the memories come rushing as if ready to turn his head around.

    ********

    Two weeks earlier, Ekiw and his kitchen cabinet had one of their several strategy sessions. It was not to develop the state. It was purely about how to keep the state perpetually in their grips.

    “We have to break the back of these ‘change people’, especially Timiro and Sidepeter,” said Anthony, the UPP chairman.

    “What do you have in mind?” Ekiw asked.

    “I know Sidepeter has a cousin who is into printing. His office is around C-Line…”

    “What has that got to do with us?” impatient Ekiw asked.

    “Plenty, Your Excellency,” Anthony replied,” We will go and plant some incriminating materials in the press relating to the rerun and we will accuse him, Sidepeter and by extension, Timiro, of plotting to rig the election in favour of their Change Peoples Congress (CPC).”

    “How do we perfect that?” Simeone asked.

    “Simple,” interjects Chukwu Oke, “What we will do is that we will not use the regular police. We will use the police attached to the deputy governor’s office and this will be done on a weekend when His Excellency will be out of town. He will then address a press conference on return about the development.”

    “How do we get Sidepeter’s man to say implicating stuffs on record?” Ekiw asked.

    “We will torture him. We will motivate our police to deal mercilessly with him so that he will own up to the crime and confess to the crime and name names. We will also get him to say that INEC released the serial number for the results’ sheets to the CPC,” said Chukwu.

    “But the beating must not be as such that he will have blood all over so that he will not be justified to claim he did it under duress,” Ekiw cautions.

    They all nodded their head. And there was silence for some ten seconds. Ekiw breaks the silence.

    “We also need to release the report of our enquiry into the violence recorded during the March rerun. We must release the report and the White Paper before the conclusion of the rerun polls. Of course, we will indict the CPC and recommend some of their key guys, especially that one who says he is honourable when in my sight he is the opposite. We will recommend him for murder trial. We will look for someone’s death to put on his neck. We can’t allow them to take this state from us. Everything must be thrown into the ring,” Ekiw said.

    His men agreed with him. They discussed further timelines for these actions and logistics were also perfected.

    ********

    Back from the land of reminisce, Ekiw grabs his phone. He summons Anthony to his office. He also orders Chukwu to report in his office immediately. Thirty-minutes later, the duo arrives. They exchange pleasantries with His Excellency.

    Ekiw sits on the couch facing the coffee table. Chukwu and Anthony finds spaces close by. He grabs the wine cup, fills it up and drinks in that characteristic style of his, which suggests “this is the life”. After gulping down the wine, he fires the first salvo: “Any information about Sidepeter’s man?”

    Chukwu speaks first: “I’m just from the control room and the information we just intercepted is that the police are bent on disgracing us if we are intent on proving any case against the man. Their position is that our action in arresting the guy was illegally carried out and cannot stand the test of the law.

    “We hear the guy is just in protective custody and not in detention as we want. That is why Timiro and Sidepeter are not making any noise about the matter. They have it all wrapped up with the security agents. In fact, from the information we intercepted, they are ready to shame us and are outrightly accusing us of planting incriminating materials in the guy’s office if we do not pipe down,” Anthony chips in.

    Ekiw says nothing, fills his cup once more and downs the content. His eyes are becoming blood-shot. He has just finished the sixth bottle of his favourite vintage Louis wine.

     

    To be continued.

  • Yoruba and burden of history in the politics of Nigeria – 2

    In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the government of western Nigeria knew the importance of history in nation-building and therefore established the Yoruba historical scheme under the late Professor Saburi Biobaku, who was sometimes Registrar of University of Ibadan, Secretary to the Government of Western Nigeria, before becoming Vice Chancellor of the University of Lagos. Those involved in the Yoruba historical scheme included late Professors J.F. Ade Ajayi, Adeagbo Akinjogbin and others. Much has been done in researching the Yoruba past but more needs to be done. Unfortunately, the governments we have had since the military intervention in Nigeria in 1966 abandoned the study of history. It seems they were determined to build a future on an historical void. Or perhaps, they wanted to have no comparative yardstick against which their regimes could be judged. Thankfully the Buhari administration has in 2016 taken a decision to ensure that history is taught at all levels of education in Nigeria.

    The military regime’s apologia was anchored on the need to build a technological and scientific foundation for the future. They were ignorant of the fact that the most technologically advanced countries like the USA, China, Germany, Japan, Great Britain and France have scrupulously preserved their history in well-endowed galleries and museums, as well as funding continuous research into the past and compulsory historical education to build confidence in their people. Knowledge of a glorious past can provide a platform or springboard for take-off for the future. Technological innovation does not depend on the multitude of scientists a country produces, but the effort of a solitary researcher or a group of geniuses, making breakthroughs in inventions or producing knowledge which can be applied to solve problems or to dominate the environment.

    It is sad that most Nigerians know very little about their past and young people suffer from cultural disconnect, disorientation and disorder. Those of us who teach young people are worried that our language and culture are dying, and we may in the future have to seek foreign assistance as usual in solving problems that are within our reach. We need to restore the teaching of history and Yoruba language to all primary and secondary schools in all states in the Yoruba area. All schools including private schools must be involved.

    Ironically, history still plays a big part in Yoruba modern politics. The struggle for pre-eminence among Yoruba Obas in recent times is a variant of how history is alive in Yorubaland. The Oyo Yoruba up to the 19th century were the dominant power in Yorubaland. In fact the Ekiti, Ijesha, Akoko, Owu, Igbomina, Egba and Ife witnessed a period of Oyo overlordship in their parts of Yorubaland. For a long time, this past history of domination was resented and this played a significant role in their political association. This was particularly the case in the rural areas even though urbanisation to a certain extent undermined the hold of history on the people. The fact that the Yoruba people are the most urbanised people on the African continent is not unconnected with the desire to congregate in fortified and easily defensible communities, believing that there is safety in numbers during the incessant wars that lasted a century from about 1793 to 1893.

    When the British came and following their desire to practice the indirect rule system of colonial administration and control which had been hugely successful in the north, they looked for suzerainty comparable with the Sokoto Caliphate. They felt they found it in Oyo and its ruler and they tried to build a new Oyo Empire. They gave the Alaafin more power than he was traditionally used to. The Alaafin might have had power in the past; this was however limited and constrained by delicate checks and balances. Raising taxes in the name of the Alaafin in Oke Ogun in 1916 for example, precipitated rebellion which exposed the British lack of knowledge of the intricate and complex politics of Yorubaland. For long, the Alaafins of Oyo enjoyed primacy in Yorubaland, yet the same British consulted the Ooni when there were disputes about succession to the throne in some parts of Yorubaland.

    Throughout the period of British colonial rule in Nigeria, the British dealt with the Obas in in terms of their order of importance to the colonial administration. The Alaafin took the preeminent position as traditional head of the Oyo-speaking people which included Oyo itself, Oke Ogun, Ibadan, Ibarapa, Osun division including Osogbo, Ede, Iwo, Gbongan and larger part of Ife division (Origbo towns and villages). Important rulers of Ijebu, Egba, Ijesha/Ekiti which included Akure and Igbomina were prominently recognised. Bini was treated as a separate but related kingdom. Apart from their utility value, there was no attempt to rank them in any hierarchical order which would have brought them into conflict with traditional politics and history, because what was apparent was not necessarily real and the importance of a ruler was not directly related to the size and economy of its kingdom.

    For most part of colonial rule, the British ruled largely by force with little or no consultation with the Africans. This was not surprising as it was the nature of imperialism. The majority of Nigerian people were uneducated. The gentlemen of Lagos who had benefited from colonial education through access to mission schools in Lagos, the most important of which was CMS Grammar School founded in 1859 were few. When Sir Fredrick Lugard came to amalgamate the Northern and Southern protectorates and the colony of Lagos, he derided the Yoruba educated elite in Lagos as “trousered niggers” who sent their laundry every week to Bond Street in London for dry-cleaning. The antagonism between him and the educated elite was mutual because they accused him of what they called “rancorous negrophobism” and authoritarianism. The disconnect and chasm between the ruled and the ruler was unbridgeable.

    Events outside Nigeria, particularly the First and the Second World Wars, undermined the colonial regime and the so-called superiority of the white man, with the effect that Nigerians starting from the Yoruba of Lagos, began to demand in the beginning participation in government and later home rule. Nationalist awakening dates back in Yorubaland to the 1880s when Lagos people organised themselves to protest against water rate. Newspapers and broadsheets had proliferated Lagos agitating against one thing or the other. It was therefore not difficult for the educated elite of Lagos after the First World War to demand for self-determination, as was being applied to the subject nationalities of the dissolved Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman empires.

    Various political parties, the most important of which were the NNDP (Nigerian National Democratic Party) and the NYM (Nigerian Youth Movement), straddled the period 1919 and 1944 when the biggest and most vibrant nationalist movement-the NCNC (National Convention of Nigeria and the Cameroons) was formed in 1944 and headed by Herbert Macaulay, the grandson of Bishop Ajayi Crowther, the Yoruba boy from Oshoogun enslaved and later educated in Freetown and London before becoming the first black African bishop of the Niger CMS mission. Nnamdi Azikiwe, the American educated Igbo man was the secretary of this nascent political organisation. The Ibo State Union was formed the same year and later became a corporate body in the NCNC and began to play significant roles in the party. Obafemi Awolowo, in reaction to this formed the Egbe Omo Oduduwa in 1947 to rally the Yoruba and to protect their interest. This was in response to the Arthur Richards constitution which divided Nigeria into three regions: namely North with Kaduna as its capital, East with its capital in Enugu and West with Ibadan as its capital.

    Awolowo founded the Action Group in 1951, which immediately became the ruling party in the west after an indirect election based on limited franchise. He was later to become premier of the region and to run one of the most successful and forward looking governments in tropical Africa, until he resigned in 1959 with the hope of becoming the Prime Minister after the pre-independence election of 1959. Unfortunately for him this was not to be. His failure was to have ramifications not only for Yorubaland but the entire country. The prominent role of the Yoruba in the political life of Nigeria was second to none at least up to 1944, and this was because since 1886, there were Yoruba lawyers and doctors beginning with the Ijesha Sapara Williamses. Thus, it was natural for them to assume the role of leaders until the whole country began to come together into the mainstream of politics in the 1950s. But as it is commonly said, politics is first local before it becomes national. This was so in Yorubaland.

  • Yoruba and burden of history in the politics of Nigeria – 1

    The Yoruba numbers about 40 million people located in Nigeria in the following states: Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Kwara, Osun, Ondo, Ekiti, Kogi, Edo and Delta (not just the Itshekiri of Warri but the Olukumi of Oshimili LGA). They are also in Benin and Togo Republics and their descendants are found in Brazil, other countries in South America Cuba, Trinidad, Tobago and other Caribbean Islands as well as in Sierra Leone. Their culture has survived in the Yoruba diaspora perhaps because of their late coming into the trans-atlantic slave trade, following the collapse of the Oyo Empire towards the end of the 18th century, or because of the strength of the Yoruba culture particularly their religion, which is widely practiced in the Caribbean and South America even by people of European descent.

    The Yoruba claim Oduduwa/Olofin as their eponymous ancestor. Oduduwa is variously said to have descended from heaven and landed in Ile-Ife. Other variant, more sensible and credible myth of the Oduduwa story says he came from the East, Baghdad or somewhere in Arabia. He is said to have been the son of Lamurudu (Nimrod) who left his homeland following dispute over religious worship and succession to the throne.

    These are myths and myth is not the subject of history. What we can deduce from the myth is that a people of advanced civilisation with working knowledge of iron, displaced possibly Stone Age people living in Ile-Ife, seized the throne and dominated the people. From Ile-Ife, sons of Oduduwa fanned out to found new kingdoms or to overthrow existing rulers in Yorubaland, Bini and related peoples like the Aja and Ga of present day Benin and Ghana republics respectively. This has led to the fact that many rulers in Yorubaland claim descent from Oduduwa. The pre-existing rulers became shadowy kings and priests ministering to the new Oduduwa descendants. We know from the study of archaeology, that Meroe in the present day Sudan was the centre of the diffusion of iron technology to Africa, and perhaps these myths of origin of West African rulers may well be referring to the coming of those who knew how to make iron implements for agriculture and for offense and defence.

    The Bayijjidah legend of the Hausa also possibly refers to the same phenomenon of outsiders serving as change agents in Africa’s ancient history. The myth of Oduduwa as the progenitor of the rulers of yorubaland is however not universally subscribed to by all Yoruba people. Awujale, the paramount ruler of the Ijebu people, claim their people came from Waddai which is in present day Chad but was part of the Kanuri dominated Kanem-Borno Empire. This is not as fanciful as it may appear because there is an extant myth among the Kanuri, who say the Yoruba are their cousins who because of their love of money left for the coast in search of the Golden Fleece. Might this myth be referring to the Ijebu who with the Ijesha share the same facial marks with the Kanuri? We know of a certainty that the dynasty in Benin is descended from Oduduwa through his grandson Oranmiyan.

    The story is well known and it suffices to say that the Benin people sent to Ile-Ife for a ruler, after having gotten rid of their Ogiso kings and finding republicanism unworkable. Ife obliged them and sent the youngest of the grandsons of Oduduwa. After a while, Oranmiyan fathered a son Eweka but left Benin disillusioned that his subjects were too difficult to control and returned to Ile-Ife. From Ile-Ife, he proceeded to Oyo to establish a new kingdom. In this way, the great kingdoms of Ife, Bini and Oyo that were to play important roles in the history of West Africa were historically linked. The Bini now claim that in fact Oduduwa was a Bini prince who was expelled from Bini, got lost in the bush and later found his way to Ile-Ife and because of his knowledge of herbal medicine was made King by the Ife people. Oranmiyan therefore was more or less their grandson who returned home. This interpretation sounds rather convenient. The reason for this new revisionism in Bini is the assertion of independence and non-subservience to a foreign ruler in the past. What is however important up till today is that the cult/court language in the Bini palace is some kind of old Yoruba and the standard greetings in the palace is “How goes Ife (Uhe)”? The mystery surrounding Ife was further complicated by the late Professor Ade Obayemi, a distinguished Professor of Archaeology, when he said the present Ife may not have been the Ife of historical antiquity. He said he had identified seven existing Ifes and that the Ife of antiquity may well be near the rivers Niger and Benue confluence.

    Furthermore and in recent times, the hilly town of Idanre in Ondo state, but which its people call IFEOKE, claims it is the original Ife and that their Oba is acknowledged by the Bini as an elder to Oranmiyan, the founder of their dynasty and they have ancient artefacts to support their claim. Usen which play a prominent role in the coronation of the Obas of Benin share identical dialect with Idanre which further shows that there is a need to examine the role of Idanre (Ireke) in Ife-Benin relation in the past. Professor Alan Ryder in his book Benin and the Europeans, using mostly Portuguese sources claimed that when the Portuguese came to Benin in the 15th century, they were told Benin paid homage to the “Oghene Luhe” North east of Benin. This he felt might be in the same direction suggested by Obayemi. Of course, the Portuguese may not have reported correctly what they were told. Ife Olukotun, located near the area suggested has not yielded any artefacts that could be dated older than those found in Ife that were produced between the ninth and the twelfth centuries. The moat around Ile-Ife, even though most of it has disappeared and the various ancient artefacts found there suggest that the present Ife is the Ife of antiquity. There is much that we do not know and there is room for serious research, because a serious question of the provenance of the founder of ancient Yoruba kingdoms is too important to leave to guess work.

    I want to emphasise that the history of dynasties should not be confused with the history of peoples. For example, we all know that the current Hanoverian dynasty in England is from Germany yet this does not mean English people are descended from Germans. Although, I know that the Saxons, a Germanic tribe, had with the angles over run the Celtic people of England in historic times. Oduduwa may be the ancestor of the rulers of Yoruba kingdoms; it does not mean Oduduwa is the ancestor of all Yoruba people. There were people in Ile-Ife and Yorubaland before the coming of Oduduwa. This is why we have chieftaincies like Obalufe, Obatala, which apparently preceded the coming of Oduduwa. Recent disputes in several kingdoms in Akure, Ekiti land and Akoko where there exists two “Kings” in one kingdom, one active, the other passive until recent times, indicate there were autochthonous people in yorubaland before the coming of the Oduduwa party. The struggle between Olukere and Ogoga, Alakure and Deji, Owa Ale and Olukare and to a certain extent Odio and Ewi and the struggle between the Oba of Benin and a chief Ogiamien claiming his ancestors were the rulers of the kingdom before Oranmiyan, are manifestations of the fact that there were not only people but rulers who have now been eclipsed and displaced by much more formidable new comers.