When news first broke out that the secondary school
leaving certificate of the presi-dential candidate of the opposition All
Progressives Congress (APC) was to become a campaign issue in the
Nigerian presidential elections, every right-thinking Nigerian dismissed
the idea and considered it a huge joke. After all, the retired
Major-General was not running for the Presidency for the first time. The
supposed joke soon developed into headline news, became
talk-of-the-town and subject of a satirical musical denigration before
finally ending up in court in surrogate litigation. It was the continuum
of a desperate bid to secure the return of the incumbent President for a
second term in office.
In the course of the malicious propaganda drive applied exclusively
by the ruling party of President Jonathan that attempted to apply all
forms of dirty tricks in the hope that one would stick, an obviously
outraged aide to the Presidents Senior Special Assistant on Public
Affairs came up with very angry verses transmitted through the
Blackberry Messenger. Mr. Deji Adeyanju left no doubt about what he
considers a sheer unthinkable option of a Buhari Presidency in a
democratic Nigeria. “Buhari can never be President of Nigeria. Quote me
any day, any time. A military coup will even be allowed than for Buhari
to become the President of a democratic Nigeria” Conclusively, he
repeated “Quote me any day, any time!”
More than a fortnight has passed since the launching of campaigns for
the coveted office of President in Nigeria. Again another joke is
brewing in the political clouds.
Media information is simply not going away insinuating that the
President of Nigeria is mulling several incredible options to
short-change the democratic process if he is unable to stop the present
momentum from translating into palpable electoral gains for the
ex-General of the opposition party come February 14, 2015. In testing
the waters to feel the depth of public reaction, the President had
obviously delegated a junior Officer in the person of his National
Security Adviser Sambo Dasuki to call for the postponement of the
elections that is due in barely 10 days. The ensuing aftershock
reverberated far beyond the shores of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Unfortunately, one cannot help but live with the impression that
Nigerian politicians have failed to draw any useful conclusion from the
Wikileaks scandal of 2010. At least we do know today, thanks to Julian
Assange, that the foreign diplomatic missions of world powers all over
the world are hardly anything else but intelligence-gathering stations.
It did not seem to have dawned on Nigerian politicians that the election
campaign was being closely monitored with reports wired back home by
the invisible observers of the United States and the European Union
covered by diplomatic immunity.
In the end, the Secretary of State of the United States had to
squeeze an unscheduled visit to Nigeria into his itineraries. In the
ensuing consultations that saw him meeting with the President and the
opposition candidate on Nigerian soil, he successfully extracted
assurances from both sides that the presidential election will be
peaceful and above all, will not be postponed. The President gave him
his word and no government functionary came out ever since, with calls
for the postponement of the election. With knowledge of how such
meetings are held however, anyone in the know will report of stern
warnings and coercions that the strong often uses against the weak.
As the days pass by, it has become obvious that the President is losing more following in a groundswell of public disenchantment with the image and performance of the President since the past six years.
In place of government functionaries, investigative reports now do the talking and the gist just won’t go that the postponement option is still very much on the table if other options fail.
Other options are the judicial disqualification of the opposition
candidate in cases filed by surrogates of the President himself while
the threat that was messaged by Mr. Deji Adeyanju has suddenly taken
center stage all over again. The military may be allowed to take over
government rather than permit the handover of political power to the
ex-Major General of the opposition in an impending landslide victory. In
an Obama-type juggernaut cruise, the momentum and pendulum that have
unmistakably swung the way of the opposition is bringing out a degree of
massive desperation in the President’s camp that transcends all the
imaginations of any mortal observer.
The truth however is that all the options on the table mean trouble
for the incumbent President no matter the odds. In the characteristic
fashion that has defined the Presidency of Mr. Jonathan for the past six
years, a realistic appraisal of the real situation with a view to
working out the best solution in the interest of the country doesn’t
seem to be a choice to make. The belief and trust in the power of
incumbency seems to be so massively exaggerated in the President’s camp
that a defeat seems to sound like a sacrilege in their ears particularly
if that defeat is suffered against the man called Muhammadu Buhari. For
this reason, national interest is sacrificed at the altar of personal
ambitions to keep the clique feeding fat.
Given the bitterness and desperation with which the campaign has been
prosecuted so far by the President’s men (with chains of trivial muds
thrown at the opposition candidate unnecessarily), it will be difficult
to appeal to a sense of goodwill and benevolence on the part of General
Buhari if eventually, a smooth transition is finally enforced. On the
other hand, if Major-General Muhammadu Buhari gets disqualified by any
corrupt and compromised judge (that is not hard to find in Nigeria) in
spite of all the clarifications offered so far, not only by the
secondary school attended by the candidate in his early days but also by
Cambridge University as a major player in the high school leaving
examinations of those days, Nigeria will surely descend into
uncontrollable anarchy. The fuel subsidy protest of 2011 will be a
child’s play in comparison.
In the end, the merit of the case will be of no interest to any
single person anymore in and outside the country since the plot is known
to be a deliberate design of the incumbent power to perpetuate itself
in office. Furthermore, if the President’s tribal companion and hatchet
man General Kenneth Minimah who was elevated over forcibly retired
senior officers into the position of Chief of Army Staff to guard the
President’s back, takes a shot at a military coup d’etat, he will have
to march over hundreds of corpses to consolidate whatever power he may
have left. He will quickly realize then that Nigeria in front of the
United States of America does not command such strategic importance as
Egypt does to get away with the massacre of innocent civilians in the
name of securing and consolidating political power.
It is true that there is hardly any world power, for which Nigeria
commands so much importance as Cote d’Ivoire does for France. It can
therefore be safely expected that no country will march into Nigeria to
arrest Goodluck Jonathan (like France did in Cote d’Ivoire to arrest
Laurent Gbagbo) if Jonathan plunges Nigeria into chaos for his own
selfish ends. Yet there are several countries that will not fold their
arms and watch Nigeria disintegrate. Intelligence gathering has already
armed several key countries with all possible and plausible scenarios
that may unfold under the heightened tension unwittingly sowed on
Nigeria by Goodluck Jonathan.
The fear of the scale of his involvement in large-scale corruption
that has now enveloped Nigeria and his involvement in the atrocities of
Boko Haram that Jonathan probably fears will be unveiled by Muhammadu
Buhari will be hastened with even more intensive consequences if
collaboration with foreign forces finally enforce the defeat that he
will ultimately suffer.
In each of the scenarios that may play out in the aftermath of
Jonathan’s unavoidable defeat, armed resistance by his militants that he
so well equipped with weapons that he has denied the Nigerian Army,
will be crushed with the help of foreign alliances despite misleading
and superficial successes they may achieve at the onset. How quickly
warships can be destroyed with missiles that are remotely fired from a
comfortable distance will be realized by these illiterate perpetrators
and probably awaken the much needed sobriety in the consciousness of
these intoxicated sons of Jah-most-high in the Marijuana creeks.
Today, the magic that the presidential election has worked is made
manifest in the sudden permission of 7,500 armed fighters of the African
Union into Nigeria in its battle against Boko Haram where American
military trainers were unceremoniously kicked out in controversial
circumstances. The fact that the Americans and the Israelis have refused
to sell sophisticated military hardware to Nigeria should be warning
enough for President Jonathan that the international community has no
appetite whatsoever to help the President arm his private army in the
creeks of the Niger Delta to detriment of the Nigerian army. And we know
only of these two countries.
In the end, Mr. Jonathan hardly has any alternative to the staging of
a free and fair presidential election devoid of any misuse of the
judiciary, the military and the electoral commission. He has no choice
but to concede defeat on the 15th of February 2015 when he will be
declared beaten hands down. Nigeria will not survive international
economic sanctions on top of the present hardship endured by the common
man to satisfy the political whims and caprices of a single person.
Jonathan will end up an international fugitive and a candidate for the
International Criminal Court if he allows the worst-case-scenario take
hold on Nigeria. Then he may quickly realize how the 7,500 soldiers of
the African Union may be quickly bolstered by aids from all over the
world to not only crush the resistance of his private army but also to
facilitate his own arrest. Once again, a word should be enough for the
wise!
Frisky Larr
Email: FriskyLarr@aol.com
Email: FriskyLarr@aol.com
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