31 Oct 2006 |
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A ‘DANCING TORTOISE’ AND THE STATE OF THE NATION
I must admit that this is not the first title that came to mind when I set out to write this commentary. It wasn’t even considered at all amongst the list of possible headings. And most definitely not, the choice of title did not come to me through divine intervention as some religion-conscious people are wont to say. The fact is, the “sudden illumination” – if I may put it that way - happened some two miserly minutes ago as I read through a curious report on the latest instalment of the Anambra quagmire which in a sense is an apt statement on the state of the nation under the clueless but dangerous Nigerian Caligula. According to the Sunnews Online edition of Saturday, October 28, 2006, an obscure association calling itself the Anambra Patriotic Front (APF) has gone to town with the improbable allegation that Nigeria’s former vice-president and statesman, Alex Ekwueme, an indigene of Anambra, is the brain behind the attempt by a bunch of conniving state legislators to impeach the state governor, Peter Obi. The APF is claiming that the anti-Obi lawmakers who have since making known their intention to usurp power relocated to Asaba, are under the occult influence of a witchdoctor there whose protection rites for his customers from Awka are administered in the presence of a lone witness in the form of a “dancing tortoise”! "…The deal/agreement was sealed by a fetish oath that was administered by a popular native doctor (name withheld by us) who is a native of
Yet, “surreal” is euphemistic if one considers the regime-induced state of quasi-anarchy prevailing in Nigeria today without any countervailing influences rising to meet the barbarians in a confrontation that citizens can no longer afford to run away from. This is precisely the subject of my article here, namely, the imperative on the part of patriotic forces to envisage concrete strategies aimed at the containment or extirpation of the malignant cancer the Obasanjo tyranny has become today. An alternate title of the commentary should thus be “Scenarios for the Containment of a Tragi-comic Autocracy”. Day in day out, we are subjected to the rude and macabre shenanigans of unscrupulous judges, rascally legislators and their paymasters in Abuja and elsewhere to the extent that our country and its ordinarily hard-working people have become the laughing-stock of the entire world. The likes of Baba Aremu and his coterie of hangers-on, kow-towing courtiers and touts may find their tragic-comic antics entertaining but Nigerians are not finding them funny. They are in the millions calling for something to be done. The time for whining or sobbing is over. One reason I was instinctively drawn to the Sunnews Online story, and this does not imply that I necessarily subscribe to the seemingly far-fetched accusation being levelled against Ekwueme, is that I found revealing the apparent determination on the part of members of the Anambra Patriotic Front, amongst other groups, to organize and mobilize the public through concrete gestures by printing and circulating leaflets to press their condemnation of the wayward legislators. To say that there is unbearable malaise in the land is an understatement. To intimate that much of that malaise is being fuelled by the reckless, lawless and bumbling kleptocracy of the Aso Rock monster is to state the obvious. Centrifugal forces of destruction and tyrannical imposition are on the prowl and something must urgently be done to stop them, before it is too late. Marooned in a desert of despair and despondency occasioned by the frightening failures of a visionless despot and his rogue regime, the average Nigerian must by now have reached that point whereby mere words of caution ring hollow and injunctions about a supposed ‘better-tomorrow’ appear forlorn and meaningless. The tentativeness of an ineffectual opposition; the timorous disposition of a largely discredited political class; the alarming truancy of the National Assembly; the befuddling inadequacies of a compromised and tarnished judiciary; the hypocrisy as well as sectarian mind-set of the national media and civil society organisations coupled with a cowardly and sedate populace, all these have contributed in no small measure to the sustenance of the murderous autocracy of the Aso Rock tin-god who seems to derive sadistic pleasure from inflicting hardship on hapless Nigerians by the unleashing of violent and cruel forces on them. If indeed all segments of society have in one way or the other contributed to the state of anomie staring us in the face, then, it is only proper that we as citizens devise concrete ways to put and end to the source of our continued suffering. Enlightened self-interest does require therefore that as a nation, we evolve ways and measures to effectively deal with what is arguably Nigerian democracy’s Enemy Number One, namely, the rampaging and predatory schemes of the dictatorship of Obasanjo and his allies. In doing so, we should be prepared to show that we can learn from history and apply its useful lessons. Throughout the history of mankind, vicious tyrants and self-important wreckers of the people’s dreams and aspirations have at the appropriate moment been made to pay for their crimes and atrocities against the people. From popular uprisings, armed campaigns to peaceful protest, pressure has often been brought to bear on repressive regimes by those interested in moving their country forward. Ancient tyrannies like the one by the demented Caligula (Emperor of Rome, A.D. 37-41) were sometimes terminated by way of determined resistance or isolated acts of rebellion against the violent tactics which the potentates employed as tools for their mindless subjugation of the people. The assassination of Emperor Caligula by his praetorian guard did put a stop to the mad ruler’s ruthless desecration of revered institutions. Not long ago, the demise of
Due to our democratic disposition, we are naturally opposed to a resort to violent means as a way of bringing sanity to the current mess in the land. Of course, I hasten to add that, to paraphrase a popular saying, those who make peaceful change impossible will invariably make violent change inevitable. This is the conundrum one is faced with in
The time for sitting on the fence is over. Any deference to evil-doers will only embolden them. If Nigerians do genuinely want a "better tomorrow", they must immediately imagine bold and concrete steps for taking out the source of their continued suffering. I concur with the Abia state governor, Orji Kalu and Ishaku Ibrahim that the various state executives should constitute a rampart against the rampaging, undemocratic impulses of the current madman of Nigerian politics. The governors should reject as deeply offensive any attempt at blackmail by Obasanjo and his attack dogs. They should especially discard their whining for a more purposeful and robust stand against the militaristic onslaught on Nigerian democracy by the Aso Rock ‘born-again’ tyrant and his henchmen in the likes of Adedibu, el-Rufai, Bode George, Nuhu Ribadu, Chris Uba, Mantu, Ahmadu Ali and Anenih. As I did mention in my article entitled "Driving Nuhu Ribadu Out of Town", the good people of
The recent example by Plateau youths should serve as a welcome warning to characters in the Obasanjo/Mantu mould. Obasanjo and his partners in crime should know that the unpardonable killings of innocent civilians in the pursuit of their evil designs are being documented and that sooner or later, they must be called upon to account for their crimes and atrocities. A special mention must also be made of the destructive role being played by the various state judges, police commissioners, military officers and so-called security agents. They also will be called upon to render accounts to the Nigerian people. There is nothing to cheer in the nauseating spectacle of state-sponsored criminality and mayhem taking place in locations like Ekiti , Plateau and Anambra. In Ekiti, the forced removal of the governor was carried out by a military invasion of the state capital by Obasanjo’s mercenaries erroneously referred to as the Nigerian army. What happened in Ekiti a few weeks ago was nothing short of a military take-over with a band of corrupt and irresponsible so-called legislators acting as accessories to the crime. And when one hears the clown calling himself Nigeria’s Attorney General shed crocodile tears in the manner of his political master by feigning a condemnation of the illegal removal of the governor and his deputy, he and his boss – master-mind of the perfidy in Ekiti and elsewhere - should be told to shove their contrived lamentation where it would have a most appropriate abode. But an even worse tragedy as far as the Ekiti fiasco is concerned is the undignified and shameless role played by so-called progressive activists in the likes of Gani Fawehinmi. Opportunists of Nigeria’s pro-democracy/pro-human rights militancy would seem to have lost their coherence when they prefer to play petty politics in Ekiti instead of calling a spade a spade and condemning in no uncertain terms the brazen lawlessness that led to the ‘coup d’état’ there. It is sad that the inconsistency and duplicitous disarray of self-proclaimed defenders of human rights are offering a dubious kind of comfort and legitimacy to the illegalities of the Obasanjo regime. In Plateau, quite obviously acting on cue, INEC has predictably joined the fray in a most ignoble manner. Until they were forced to retrace their steps, most likely by the defiant mood on the part of the people of the state against the marauding agents of destabilization and their sponsors, INEC agents did announce on the heels of the botched attempt to initiate impeachment proceedings against Governor Dariye, that they were going to hold elections for seats currently occupied by 14 legislators who happen to be opposing or at least not supporting the illegal attempts to remove Dariye. An important lesson from the stand-off in Plateau is the value of concerted opposition to the type of thuggery represented by Obasanjo and his sinister gang. A broad alliance of the local political elite and the masses of the people, it would seem, has taken shape and is determined to decisively reject the impositions of a desperate and discredited band of usurpers operating from
It is pertinent therefore to reiterate here that the effort by the National Assembly in the necessary opposition to the tyrannical order in the country today should go hand in hand with the people’s determination at all meaningful levels to protect their rights. In that regard, it is noteworthy the concern expressed recently by the Senate president, Ken Nnamani, who spoke a few weeks ago at the inauguration of the Senate ad-hoc committee set up to probe the Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF) in the light of the allegations by Obasanjo and Vice president Atiku, respectively, regarding their alleged misuse of the fund. Nnanami did observe: "These accusations have the capacity to diminish the moral credibility of the Presidency. The Presidency is not an individual. It is an institution. It is an institution that symbolises the strength and dignity of the Nigerian people. We cannot allow this institution to be degraded and demystified …. As the elected representatives of the people, it is our historical duty to save the Presidency from further embarrassment. The Presidency is a national institution that we must protect irrespective of our view about the present occupants of the office. In order to protect the Presidency, we must clear it of cobwebs of mistrust, mischief and scandal. With truth, justice and fairness, we can save the Presidency and save our democracy…In constituting this special committee, the Senate acted in the best traditions of statesmanship. We carry the burden of history to ensure that we reposition the Presidency in the eyes of Nigerians…” . Encouraging words indeed! It is hoped that the National Assembly will confound the sceptics amongst us and truly rise to the occasion by making the quest to cleanse the presidency and save Nigerian democracy a holistic venture. That is to say, a coherent enterprise that is neither episodic nor cosmetic in nature, but one that is systematic, thorough and above all, predicated on the National Assembly’s oversight function of legislation for the nation. The intervention of the National Assembly on the side of the people will help reduce the risk of citizens having to resort to “self-help” measures in order to deal with adversity in their midst. The 2007 elections are around the corner. The pre-election period is being unnecessarily polluted by the violent and lawless antics of a debauched tyrant and his associates. Anambra state is once more on fire with reports that the governor’s official residence in
Aonduna Tondu
New York
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