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Many decisions have been made on behalf of Nigerians but none has been as monumental as that of Yar Aduas political legitimacy. In the short history of Nigeria, far too many decisions have caused the citizens to question the courage of the judiciary, the legislators and even the press. In 1979, a decision on the legitimacy of the nations number one citizen was made by the court of jurisprudence in the case of Shagari vs Awolowo. In 1999 again, our nation was brought to her knees in Obasanjo vs Buhari and finally in 2008, the nation was faced with legitimacy of the President Yar Adua. It looks as if at every juncture, Nigeria did not learn any lesson.
Each of the decisions brought Nigeria to a precipice and each time our nation shot circuited the system for expediency leading to moral disaster. On the three cases sited above, Obasanjo was a factor. Nigeria placed her absolute trust on OBJ hoping hell do the right thing at least 60% of the time, but our nation forgets to note that only the almighty places the heaviest burden on those who can carry its weight.
Justice James Ogebes ruling should not have come as a surprise when placed in historical perspective because there are often unwritten rules in legal-political ruling; Gore vs. Bush is clear and convincing example. The decision to legitimize Musa Yar Aduas presidency was not based on whether there was rigging or on the credibility of Musa Yar Adua, far from it. Just like the affirmation of President G.W. Bushs presidency in 2001, Yar Aduas legitimacy has nothing to do with rigging because the decision of the court was diametrically opposed to the views of all Nigerians, it had everything to do with not tempting the military to stage a comeback and the issue of stabilizing the nation at al cost.
For America, every of her citizens knew that something happened in Florida, every American knew that Gore won the popular vote, American people wanted him but the power that be decided otherwise through the Supreme Courts unpopular verdict which the United States of America accepted only to the extent that theyll have opportunity to correct the errors that brought G.W. Bush into the office of presidency of the United States of America. For Nigeria, there has never been courage to correct mistakes but an exacerbation of events that brought about political instability.
Gore capitulated on his fight for the sake of a peaceful nation he loved or because somebody coerced him to drop his fight or else ... Does it then means that the US Supreme Courts decision to make G.W. Bush the president exonerated the shenanigans in Florida? The answer is no. The answer is no because judges decisions are sometimes extemporaneous at best and President Yar Aduas legitimacy did not imply that Yar Adua was not rigged into office. What we hope and pray for is that even though Nigerians recognize that the elections were massively rigged by all parties, we accept the decision while demanding that the President act more like the president of Nigeria not Obasanjos surrogate or President of special interest groups. Yes, because of PDP, OBJ controlled the rigging apparatus due to power of incumbency. In all this, PDP was better able to rig the election than all the other parties combined in an OBJ termed a do-or-die election.
It is sad that both Chief Obasanjo and Professor Iwu are not smart enough to leave Nigeria alone to nurse her wounds. Instead, they decided to pour pepper on an open wound by finding a legitimate way to defend their illegitimate acts. These are only two Nigerians among 140 million citizens who are bent on destroying the nation by indirectly telling us that we are stupid. In a court of law, a win by one side does not imply that the other side is not right. A ruling, often times, signifies the conditional think of a presiding often mortal judge and this is why a ruling is sometimes appeal and cases sometimes reversed. The issue here is that these two principal characters knowingly put Nigeria into a tail spin for selfish reasons. Nigerians cannot be all that stupid in believing that the elections were rigged, and most of the elections were rigged, period.
The reason why I believe Professor Iwu needs to honorably vacate his current post for the sake of Nigeria is not because he is an Igbo that erred but because he was given a responsible to conduct a credible election and he failed. What is the measure of his failure? Any sane Nigerian can measure Professor Iwus failure on the following: a) President Yar Adua himself admitted that the election was marred with disparities, code word for rigging; b) Many of the elections conducted by Professor Iwu have been over turned; c) Election materials were found in bushes and yet number of votes assigned to PDP were more than total number of people who voted; d) The international election observers noted that there was massive rigging; and if not enough, e) If Professor knew he acted in good fate, why was it necessary to go outside of the Nigerian shores to ask political prostitutes to help launder his image, guilty conscience, my dear Mr. Watson. What part of this indictment are OBJ and Iwu not capable of understanding?
Professor Iwu cant be proud of the imminent slaps on his person. The fact is Professor Iwu accepted the responsibility to run free and fair election and, promised to do so even if his life depended on it. Therefore, Professor Iwu must be capable of accepting both the good and bad results and stop making a mockery out of a disjointed political system. The judgment of judge Ogebe never vindicated Professor Iwu as he claimed. Vindication of Professor Iwu was not part of the election challenges because it is a non sequitur. We therefore ask Professor Iwu to go somewhere to cool his heels. It is only in Nigeria that an armed robber will be accusing the victim of not having enough security to prevent his from gaining entrance into the premise and still get away scot free.
Granted, Professor Iwu is of Igbo extraction, he never called his tribes men or shearing he content of his OBJ Ghana-must-Go bag with them before he allowed the election to be massively rigged. The tribal sentiment must not be allowed to stop us from seen the bigger picture and from making decisions that need courage and that are mutually beneficial to our nation. Professor Iwu must be made to account for the money he wasted conducting unfair elections and for pouring so much vituperation on the nation. If Professor Iwu failed to see that Nigerians are not stupid, he ought to have had the sixth sense to observe the reckless manner he, his then boss (OBJ), some political godfathers and touts that took the nation through by their desperate drive to install a president that they believed would be a mere puppet. President Yar Adua may not be a puppet afterall.
Nigerians are continuously bitten by the tribal bugs. It is unfortunate that Nigerians cannot shed their greed which is sometimes marred in tribal afflictions in order to take courageous decisions capable of benefitting Nigeria. Those none Igbos who wish Professor Iwu away because they tied his disappointedly-run election to his tribal affiliation are missing the point. Professor Iwu cannot be wished away because of his tribal affiliation just like OBJs disappointing and self-serving administration cannot be related to his Yoruba tribe. Rather, Professor Iwus failure must be placed squarely on his insincerity, his unpatriotic acts, his misplaced priorities and more importantly his incompetence. He disappointed himself and disappointed Nigeria because when brave heart was needed he acquiesced to the mischief of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, and thus, he set Nigeria several years back.
Professor Maurice Iwu knows that the decision ofthe Appeal Court clearly did not vindicate him or his boss, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo. Both Professor Iwu and ex-president Olusegun Obasanjo were the greatest beneficiaries of the infractions inflicted on the nations national psyche. The judgment of Judge Ogebe panel will only be worth the gamble for taking a cowardly decision if President Yar Adua uses his mandate to serve the nation. The issue now for Nigeria is not the defective pronouncement given by the Judge Ogebe panel but whether Nigeria can rise above the defective judgment and make Yar Adua one heck of a leader that knows the way, goes the way and shows the way to our nation. Nigerias greatest burrier to success, so far, has always been predicated upon her leaders fear of failure. OBJ, IWU and recently Judge Ogebe failed to allay the nations fear of failure again in 2008.

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Posted by Robot| 11.03.2008 11:21