By Pat Utomi
The hate speech is everywhere. They are
coming from people you expect to be more responsible. The so called
campaign adverts do more damage than the young people, on social media,
who seem not to realize how Rwanda happened, even though one of them has
generously been circulating a warning from the Sierra Leone experience
authored by one Omar Bangura. Then there is Obasanjo in the broth. Quo
Vadis Nigeria?
A quarter of a century ago I wrote a weekly column in this newspaper, The Vanguard.
Its title was Thinking Aloud. And it appeared every Tuesday. That I
find myself thinking aloud today shows, to use the title of a book by
another Vanguard columnist of old, the late Pini Jason, that we
are travelling A familiar Road. Sadly, this familiar road is looking
like it is getting so much more dangerous we can reap more damage than
the recursive economy we have erected from moving close to the brink
ever so often and retreating from the edge of the cliff.
The bottom line in this effort at
thinking aloud is to remind political actors of their duty to campaign
and not stoke conflagaration and to remember accountability for the
consequence of their conduct. The Campaigns of 2015 have been more
animated because the stakes are higher. For the first time in a long
time there are equally matched Political Parties contesting the
Presidency. Here tribute has to go to the Lion of Bourdillion, former
Lagos State Governor, Bola Tinubu.
The building of a strong opposition has
been central to my own engagement in partisan political life. After
eight years of fairly intense engagement on the matter, I literally
threw up my hands in frustration before Sen. Bola Tinubu.
The former Lagos State Governor who had
been in the process, decided it was time to get things done and he met
with success. Instead of celebrating this success the 2015 seems to have
moved elections into the new moral equivalence of war. Insensitivity to
what makes competitive electoral politics work for countries is now in
danger of making this good thing of a two party dominant system a threat
rather than opportunity for the well being of the Nigerian people.
Blood is beginning not to seem to matter. But those of a certain faith
know how Abel’s blood mattered.
When I spoke at the Leadership
Newspapers annual lectures a few years ago on the subject of Political
Opposition and Political Parties I made the point that the raising of
contending perspectives on the issues in governing, with the benefit of
the education of voters, was one of the great benefits of multi party
democracy. Surely the people cannot learn and vote right, better, with
the hauling of insults and digging up of old wounds, as they will if
policies on diversification of the economy, job creation to deal with
the scourge of unemployment; Corruption, which has clearly become a
weapon of mass destruction, and how to better insure security of lives
and property, are not more important than personal insults, religious
and ethnic sentiments.
Spectres of violence
As frightening as the poisoning of the
atmosphere in a way that raises spectres of violence, before, during and
after the elections there is the question of how people think they can
govern if there is so much bitterness between the actors. No one can
govern effectively without the other, so democracies need to have a
culture of moving on after elections with less sharp divisions between
government and opposition, even when the useful tool of a shadow
government exists. When the quarrels become personal and deeply bitter,
as the kind of contention we are witnessing, has potential for, that
cooperative engagement for nation building is denied society. Surely,
the Nigerian people do not deserve such.
How come politicians, who have reached
heights they may never have aspired to, but for opportunities that
Nigeria provided, do not reflect enough on how these expressions of
aggression and desperation can bring the whole house come tumbling down.
How do not feel possible outcomes from such desperate games.
Casting my mind to how we managed to get
to this stage I can see enough blame to parcel around. From the nature
of political recruitment process, the material benefits to be made from
politics, the poor education in history of politicians; a media not as
alive as it should be to its social responsibility role; weak civil
society and elders that have failed to be elders, all have blame as I
do. The costs are already manifesting in economic decline, tense
environment, escalating violence with amazing levels of loss of lives
and lowered standing in the world, for Nigeria, if we read the foreign
press on these elections.
How do you justify the vicious attack on
the character of opponents. While both sides of the two leading parties
could tone down on those kinds of personal broadsides, that amount to
petrol and matchsticks in the minds of supporters, I must say that
General Buhari has been the greater victim. In his media chat President
Jonathan suggested he may not be in the know of hate messages flowing
from people who act in his interest. He should make effort to find out.
One civil servant in fact said to me
that the awkwardness of desperation flowing from incumbents was because
the fear of a clean audit of the system by a cleansing new government
frightened many civil servants and politicians indulged in an orgy of
corruption and impunity. In the old wisdom of Machiavelli, in The Prince:
those who profit from an older order will do everything to prevent a
new order from coming about; while those who could profit from the new
order do not do enough to bring it about because man is incredulous in
his nature, not wanting to try new things until they have witnessed
experience of it.
I often dare to add that those who could
profit from the new order are usually in the majority and do not act in
their interest. However, on this occasion I would point to the fact
that where profit from the old order is criminal, as with the current
pervasive corruption and impunity in the system, those who profit from
the old order are more likely to be most desperate. The problem with
such desperation is that it is enormously short sighted to let personal
desperation bring a country to ruin, because in the end even if they
temporally uphold the old order, the people ultimately get desperate
enough from the weight of injustice that the House falls, in their
uprising for justice.
Like in Liberia and Somalia or Rwanda,
they trade their private jets and fancy cars for refugee camps or police
cells, awaiting transfer to the internal criminal court, whereas only a
few could have been used as example if the new order had been allowed
to arrive.
Sacred trust
But it is telling of how much rot we
have all allowed the system to degenerate into that people who have the
sacred trust of agents superintending the Commonwealth are so scared
that a cleansing new order might come about. This is why a premium part
of my prescription is that no matter the outcome of the elections, a
primary duty would have to involve a reform of the rewards of public
life, recruitment into political parties and positions in public office
and citizen monitoring of public management.
The rewards of power in Nigeria are
quite unhealthy for good governance. We must push for a political
culture that emphasizes the simple life for people in power. Beside
humanizing power, which is important for democracy, as different from
the current distance and disconnect of the public office holder in
Nigeria, it makes having office so alluring that pursuit of it, becomes
the favourite chase of scoundrels, rather than people who can give
service. We need to get rid of motorcades, dramatically reduce or get
rid of the presidential fleet, or government jets, prosecute public
officers who avoid commercial flights, except in attenuating
circumstances, and charter jet aircraft for local travel. We should also
bring security votes under some oversight, and limit discretion in
deployment of public resources.
Presently political parties across the
board disappoint on how they recruit and select candidates. If character
were a premium we will have limits to the swings in loyalty. In the
main it remains about cash, not competence, commitment, credibility and a
passion for service, with only occasional exceptions from the rule.
Unfortunately, as I feared, the
postponement of the elections, no matter the truth of the motivation for
such a shift, has only intensified this sense of desperation. The
emotions boiling in people for and against one candidate or the other
has converted the radio phone in show into a stream of venomous
outpouring of hate talk. If they only knew it was how the chant ‘cut
down the tall trees’ took hold in Rwanda and exposed man’s bestiality in
the golden glow of sad sunshine.
Cautioning moderation
We must, as we say in Nigeria, exclaim:
it is not our portion. But ejaculatory prayer is not enough. We must
work and pray. And to work here begins with politicians speaking
prudently; elders acting wisely, and cautioning moderation, and the
media and civil society getting politicians to focus on the issues while
INEC forces a pulling off of messages that smear others. Then there is
Obasanjo.
May God give General Obasanjo temperance
of nature and as an elder wisdom to make what point he thinks is
useful, with learning from the Clintons on Bushes who seldom speak on
the extant order and are, therefore, not subjected to rain of insults I
hear pouring down in torrents on a father of the nation, from people as
young as not to have been born when Abacha held him in the Nigerian
Gulag.
As we act and pray, I trust that Nigeria
will rise up again, like the phoenix from this low point it has fallen,
because the cost is high. The Business class seats on major commercial
airlines into Lagos had dropped so low a friend on a well known flight
from London had only three others sharing the cabin, the stock market
fell eight percent in the week following the postponement of the
elections and was ranking with Ukraine as among the most challenged in
the world. Desperate politicians hardly think economic costs to the
people.
In many democracies in the world that I
know many office holders and Leader Wannabes would rather bow out with
grace than let their country suffer such for the sake of their ambition.
For some reason love for country in Nigeria is still at such low stock
that many who lead us would rather our stock crash than their fortunes.
We must keep hope alive but the truth is
that the polity is sick, the economy is unwell and I am not feeling
quite so good myself. So let the deliverance ministry go to work. We
need dry bones to rise and walk.
P.S The forgoing
lines were written before General Olusegun Obasanjo’s dramatic tearing
up of his PDP membership card. While that is within the rights of the
individual in freedom of expression I hasten to plead that elders have a
duty to calm tempers and not pour kerosene on troubled waters.
Troubled waters
For some time I have been ‘harassing’
the elders I am friendly with, General Gowon, Gen TY Danjuma, General
Ibrahim Babangida, General Aliyu Gusau and others that they must speak
caution and peace to the land so history not treat us as some have
unfortunately had to be treated as I look at the Middle East, Somalia,
Libya, and elsewhere, even as the world looks to an age of progress.
I have done it so often that some of
these elders jokingly or seriously begin to warn me as I come towards
them. February 16 was a cause of great fright for me. I hope now that
people who failed to understand why I once suggested the incumbent
should gracefully step away to save the country these kinds of moments
will understand. Add to the events of Abeokuta the frenzy of support for
General Buhari in Maiduguri that was of such a pitch he could not even
stay on at the rally as a change desperate people poured out their
hearts. Our country is polarized we need the calming balm of statesmen.
Listening to radio call-in shows and
hearing the passions for and against I begin to fear that the
politicians need to read the Omar Bangura piece and begin to educate all
that the key to the future is for all to be inside the house pissing
out, than for some to be outside the house pissing in. Veritable words
from Lyndon Baines Johnson, the former US president, which the
Malaysians adopted as Mantra for their vision 2020 process.
Again I like to recall comments I made
at lecture to mark the 60th birthday of Pastor Wale Adefarasin, a few
years ago. Ironically the speakers were the now APC V-P nominee, Prof
Yemi Osinbajo and myself. I gave examples from Liberia and Somalia of
elite of Somalia and Liberia and what they, were reduced to in refugee
camps and Osinbajo who served on an assignment in Somalia cited an
example he witnessed.
The key is for all to remember that
Nigeria, and the future of our children come bigger than all our egos.
So let them arm themselves with Olive branches and know that to allow a
country like this become a version of Dante’s inferno, the hottest part
of hell will be like deep freeze, compared to what they reap as against
the path of immortality, in erecting peace but encouraged violence.
Credit: vanguardngr.com
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