27

Feb

2008

The Three Musketeers PDF Print E-mail
By Adeola Aderounmu
27 February 2008
The judgment delivered by the presidential election petition tribunal on Nigeria’s Super Tuesday was highly questionable. It cannot be based on the pieces of evidence that showed that the presidential selection process of April 2007 was a complete sham. To the best of my knowledge, that selection process remains the most shameful charade of all time. It cut across human history as the worst attempt to enthrone a democratic leader. However, in the court of law, every man is expected to prove his case beyond the so called “reasonable doubts”.

In recent weeks, a section of Nigerians have continued to praise the Judiciary for asserting its independence and authority. Nigeria has never had it so robust that the Judiciary can nullify fraudulent electoral victories. In some court decisions, the judgments have defiled logic but they fall in line with the rhythm of popular expectations. I am tempted (perhaps wrongly) to assume that the judgments delivered to date are actually not based on the rule of law but on the individuals involved and the expectations of the majority.

It would be nice to feel the rhythm of the general population in Nigeria through an opinion poll so that one can ascertain if the judgments given on the 27th of February followed the same pattern (which is the expectation of the majority). From my own myopic angle, what I see is a preferential judgment based on the three musketeers who are vying for the nation’s top job. I see a judiciary that would rather not add an additional baggage to a boat already in a rocky motion.

I think the judgment was rather an answer to a simple question: between Atiku, Buhari and Yar Adua, in whose hands is Nigeria safer and less corrupt in the next 4 years? The opposition as represented by Buhari and Atiku does not signify anything good for Nigeria.

Buhari was a former coup plotter who had violently and forcefully overthrown democratic governments in the past. He has no business to aspire to be a democratic president. People like him and Babangida should be facing charges relating to treasonable felony. He has been faulted for his religious inclination and apparent non-tolerance of people of divergent beliefs. He must never be allowed to be a civilian president. He has contributed enough to the destruction in Nigeria as a coup plotter and military head.

Atiku is a very corrupt man. As a civil servant he became stupendously rich probably looting and stealing government funds. How can he defend all the wealth that he amassed while in public service? As the vice-president who masterminded the rigging of elections in 1999 and 2003, he has no morality on the issues at stake. He stole so much that he dipped his hand into Petroleum Development Funds and got carried away with it. All the monies stolen by Atiku and his boss Obasanjo were made public knowledge during the third term war of Obasanjo with the rest of the country. How can we forget? When will the likes of Obasanjo and Atiku answer for their corrupt charges. They are the ones who told us how and when they stole!

Somehow, no matter how devilish and anti-democratic the judgment of the court appears, we are still left with very bad people trying to take control of our lives. Let Buhari and Atiku go and sit down. They should return all the monies that they have stolen from Nigeria. Rather than going to the Supreme Court and wasting more looted money, they should give the money to charity or to the 90% of Nigerians who don’t have 2 dollars to spend in a day.

Yar’ Adua must be smiling now. He has a right to be the president of Nigeria but it is good that he has acknowledged that the process (not election) that brought him to power was very fraudulent. His emergence in 2007 points to the persistent power play among those who are hell bent on using Nigeria’s wealth to their selfish benefits. Maurice Iwu, the disconnected umpire must also be celebrating now, probably having a party to laugh at his perceived enemies. No doubt, in Nigeria, the reign of evil is the norm.

This is a country that claims to be the giant of Africa but all that is radiated from her are the attributes of a clown. Beyond this political impasse, ordinary Nigerians want to feel the benefits and dividends of democracy. We want water in our homes, good food on our tables and we long for the basic infrastructure that will add meaning and quality to our lives.

Our schools are dilapidated and they have lost their glories. The primary, secondary and tertiary institutions are mere shadows of their old selves. The worst roads in the world are probably in Nigeria! Fraudulent activities abound, corruption is a way of life and lawlessness is an acceptable concept. Unemployment is a major problem and our life expectancy points to the poor state of health facilities. We are not tired of recounting our woes as we continue to live with them daily.

While we endure this illegitimate government, one hopes that those who are its beneficiaries will not get carried away by the undue victory at the court of law. In Nigeria, the law has a very short arm and cannot yet deliver all the oppressed and suppressed people. We don’t expect too much from the beneficiaries since they didn’t emerge from our votes but let them not make our lives more miserable than it is at this moment.

I must add that the issues at stake are complicated. The opposition is represented by undesirable elements. Still, based on democratic principles and the enthronement of proper standard for governance, the judgment of the court was simply absolute nonsense. On this particular case, history will judge them as supporting the disenfranchisement of 140m Nigerians. It is not worthwhile repeating all the atrocities and illegalities that went along with the selection process of April 2007. They are too shameful and too scandalous to recall every now and then.

Finally, it is difficult to know where the hope of the common man lies in Nigeria. It is a dilemma having to always choose between the devil and the Dead Sea. The people who are sincere and who can lead Nigeria out of the doldrums have never been given the benefit or opportunity to steer the course of Nigeria. It has been the same sad story, the same sad song since 1960.

The hope and the emancipation of Nigerians remain delusionary but we must keep the dreams alive. We’ll see where we go from here!

aderounmu@gmail.com

Thy Glory O’ Nigeria…!



Your Comments

Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 27.02.2008 15:56

The judgment delivered by the presidential election petition tribunal on Nigeria’s Super Tuesda...Read the full article.

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Ukpana Okpoko GbuluUkpana Okpoko Gbulu is offline

 # 2 | 28.02.2008 03:17

Truth is constant but apparently not in Nigeria. What people like Mr Adeola would have us do is to bury truth for expediency. Unfortunately truth has a way of popping up from the shallow graves its enemies would want to place it in. Danjuma's tales are very informative on this as at present. Why do people let their prejudices color what they think and say? In South Africa, Jacob Zuma despite all the criticisms won the ANC leadership. No one sent the army out to stop him, or corrupt th system just because of Zuma. Why do Nigerians love to accept less than other nations do? Could it be because deep within us is a certain guilt that we would also pervert the system? This question is begging for an answer.

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peterclaver2006peterclaver2006 is offline

 # 3 | 28.02.2008 06:48

This is pure hogwash by a washerman that is desperate to force down the fraud that happened in April. I have never seen a more awkward situation where characters that live, breathe and ooze fraud from all pores of their bodies think they can hoodwink others from labeling those that oppose them as corrupt and incompetent. This piece, as awkward as it is, remains the most dawdy piece I have read in some years. Is he arguing that Nigeria should select its leaders through such shambloic and fraud- wracked means as his saint emerged? What manner of saint should allow his name to be associated with such electoral roguery as the one that produced his saint? This writer should find better job than struggling to justify a world-known scam through which Yar’Adua emerged. Aderomu would have told us why he believes that the most honest Nigerians leaders have to emerge through fraud and the type of scam that produced his saint, Yar’Adua. Colin Powel once said that Nigeria is a nation of scammers and I know that more than other Nigerians, it is the breed of vote robbers, treasury raiders, do-or-die rapists and serial murderers, sexual perverts and depraved looters Aderomu sought to extol in this piece as worthy to be our leaders that are responsible for why a nation that is awash in petro-dollars cannot afford an average one-hour light supply every day. We have heard so much about how those that are fighting this ultra-corrupt tendency are the only corrupt people in Nigeria while the robbers that have stolen over N60 trillion between 1999 and 2008 and have imposed one of their spineless collaborators through the most fraudulent electoral process in history so as to cover their corrupt acts, are the saints that must lead us to nowhere. Still wonder why the Obasanjo-Yar’Adua balderdash is leading Nigeria through the most rudderless maze that shocks and awes mankind despite that we are making trillions of Naira that go to feed party hustlers and election riggers while this writer seeks to pass the can to people who operate outside this parody of government. Whatever their flaws, Buhari and Atiku are far more than this serpentine, ethereal lackey who seems so unsure and so tentative that Nigeria presently hangs on the precipice while the evil marauder from Otta and his colony of economic plunderers run amok all over the country.

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K_StationK_Station is offline

 # 4 | 28.02.2008 14:00


=peterclaver2006;4294992439>This is pure hogwash by a washerman that is desperate to force down the fraud that happened in April. I have never seen a more awkward situation where characters that live, .................... Whatever their flaws, Buhari and Atiku are far more than this serpentine, ethereal lackey who seems so unsure and so tentative that Nigeria presently hangs on the precipice while the evil marauder from Otta and his colony of economic plunderers run amok all over the country.



Clever Peter, did you even read this article at all? I don't see how AA in this article is excusing the wrongs of the April 2007 elections, you need to cool temper before you give yourself high blood pressure over things that are beyond your control o! If you feel this strongly about things maybe it's time you STEP UP AND DO SOMETHING instead of the unending 'cyber-ranting'. I don't know if they now offer health insurance in Lagos, but if you get high blood pressure, na you sabi because Nigeria go continue o!

Meanwhile AA, thank you for another good one!

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Adeola AderounmuAdeola Aderounmu is offline

 # 5 | 28.02.2008 14:36


=K_Station;4294992520>Clever Peter, did you even read this article at all? I don't see how AA in this article is excusing the wrongs of the April 2007 elections, you need to cool temper before you give yourself high blood pressure over things that are beyond your control o! If you feel this strongly about things maybe it's time you STEP UP AND DO SOMETHING instead of the unending 'cyber-ranting'. I don't know if they now offer health insurance in Lagos, but if you get high blood pressure, na you sabi because Nigeria go continue o!

Meanwhile AA, thank you for another good one!



Thank you K_STATION.

After reading the first 2 responses to this article, I was actually dumbfounded. I was forced to print out the article for a friend (who is also a writer) to read.

My writer-friend told me that those responses showed ZERO understanding of the content of the article.

AND with the entry from (you) K_station, I am now very sure that peterclaver and Gbulu were not responding to the article-The Three Musketeers.

I have my own way of attacking very useless entries in the village square but I’ll let this pass. However, I was really disappointed that Claver Peter Opara used those expressions. It was a BIG letdown.

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Ofunwa VillagerOfunwa Villager is offline

 # 6 | 28.02.2008 16:23

What i keep hearing in this article is the voice of a man who is finding it difficult to take a standpoint in the ruling of the presidential election tribunal. On one hand he seem to say that the tribunal has listened to the inner wishes of Nigerians and has chosen UMYA because Atiku and Buhari going by their anti democratic and corrupt past are not fit for the office of the presidency. In other words, out of the three evils, there is a lesser one. On the concluding stage he recognised the election for what it was, a fraud perpetrated against a nation by an evil clique led by OBJ. I hear the voice of a confused man, a man struggling to please all the facets of opinion as regards this issue, a man who seems to have gleefully accepted the end product of an over-rigged election and at the same time seeming to slam the same system that brought him forth. I can't truly understand the position of this writer.

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Ofunwa VillagerOfunwa Villager is offline

 # 7 | 28.02.2008 16:29

What i keep hearing in this article is the voice of a man who is finding it difficult to take a standpoint in the ruling of the presidential election tribunal. On one hand he seem to say that the tribunal has listened to the inner wishes of Nigerians and has chosen UMYA because Atiku and Buhari going by their anti democratic and corrupt past are not fit for the office of the presidency. In other words, out of the three evils, there is a lesser one. On the concluding stage he recognised the election for what it was, a fraud perpetrated against a nation by an evil clique led by OBJ. I hear the voice of a confused man, a man struggling to please all the facets of opinion as regards this issue, a man who seems to have gleefully accepted the end product of an over-rigged election and at the same time seeming to slam the same system that brought him forth. I can't truly understand the position of this writer.