| Adedibu: Thankfully Gone |
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| Written by Michael Egbejumi-David | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Monday, 21 July 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Well, it has been just over a month since Chief Lamidi Adedibu departed these parts. The erstwhile Garrison Commander of Ibadan and Oyo State politics is probably plying his trade in Hades slowly but surely creating elbow room and establishing a small territory for himself. But Hades gain is Oyo States loss (or vice versa). Certainly it is a loss to the multitude of miscreants; opportunists; destitutes and motor park touts that have made Adedibus home their second home. It is also a loss to the lazy politicians who would rather go to Adedibu, pay the man, and have him thrust them into one political office or the other. They would now have to work a bit harder for their mandates. One of the greatest tragedies of the Adedibu era was the notion he sold to the people; and that was readily parroted by quite a few politicians both within and outside Ibadan that his was a brand of practical or grass root politics. It wasnt. Adedibu never truly fed or cared for anyone. He groomed and nurtured an underclass that ensured his perfidious reign and kept him relevant. Adedibus grass root politics was a variant of what largely obtained (?obtains) in some northern parts of Nigeria. The destitute are held down by a tokenistic mess of porridge. They are fed, clothed and educated enough to keep them as loyal slaves to master. They are generally kept just hungry enough to make them too unmotivated and ensure that they come back for more; but not too hungry to launch a full scale revolt. It is the reverse of the teach-a-man-how-to-fish theory. Paradoxically, the resources that is meant to free these masses from their dependence; the resources that is required to teach them how to properly fish for themselves - feed themselves, clothe themselves, educate themselves, etc, is crudely and strong-armed ransomed off various governments and State agencies a tiny proportion of which is used to feed them enough to make them gratefully dependent and commit their future to the defence of their benefactor. That is the Adedibu brand of social politics. This is what Obasanjo was trying to replicate at the Federal level of governance. That evil and short-sighted template doesnt lend itself to creative thinking and long term problem resolution. There is a danger that with the demise of its prime advocate (certainly in southern Nigeria), the political pendulum might again favour the progressives. That was what probably brought OBJ to tears at Adedibus interment. Some southern Nigerians like to (rightly) talk down the Almajiri system up north; but when Adedibu unleashed an almost exact adult system in Ibadan, they called it populist and pragmatic politics. Yeah right! To emphasise the genius of the system this man put in place: His dynasty is likely to pass-on to a character called Tokyo a motor park ex-convict. Adedibu saw politics narrowly as warfare and not as mass empowerment. He ensured that informed and enlightened politics and discourse was killed in Oyo State. He dragged that once dynamic State down to his own level (through sheer savagery) the same way northern Emirs did all those years ago. The only difference was that he wasnt doing it to maintain the aristocratic class system. He just wanted to be relevant and have a say in his local politics at all cost. In the place of religion; he used amala. He backed up mafia-like his method by unleashing unbridled and gratuitous mayhem on his locale. God only knows how many people his thugs killed and maimed. How many children were made orphans. He used his army to defeat even NAFDAC in Ibadan. He provided the muscle for those trading in contaminated sea food. His thinking or worry didnt extend to the poor souls who will be damaged by buying and eating such products. His natural worry was the regular commission being paid him by the traders. Worryingly, in the few weeks since Adedibus demise, I have read and heard a lot of romanticised version of his life and work. That is us Nigerians for you. At least Abachas fellow evil Generals waited ten years before they attempted an ungainly revisionism. Truth is there was absolutely nothing altruistic about Adedibu. Perhaps when Chris Uba goes, he would also be eulogised for all his good work in Anambra. Adedibu except for a brief period at the very beginning of his political life was always in the retrogressive camp. After losing two low level elections in 1954 and 1956, Adedibu never left the art and science of election to the electorate. He just never took that chance again. That was a major part of his political philosophy. He came, but he did not leave his environment better than he met it. He left it disorganised, timid, fearful, and socially undeveloped. That is the bitter truth. Ibadan, curiously, has always being in the grip of one strongman or the other. There was Chief Adegoke Adelabu, and Chief Busari Adelakun. While Adelabu employed the power of (the English) language and bluster, Adelakun was famed for his use of blue tooth or remote control. But Adedibu made all their exploits pale into insignificance. Adedibu relied heavily on thuggery and violence. Alao-Akala described him in death as an uncommon specie. Yes he was that. He was a grand ol geriatric delinquent. Some say it is not our culture to speak ill of the dead. I say if you dont want people to speak ill of you when you die, dont do ill to the people when youre alive. If you dont want your memory to rubbished and besmirched after death, then live right and do right. Often times, rejoicing or pouring invectives on the dead is the only recourse a long suffering and oppressed people have against their oppressors. Ask Abacha. And let that be a lesson to all the bad big-men that currently litter our nation space. It was reported that 100 of Adedibus boys caught with tons of marijuana and some weapons were arrested just before his death. Because the Chief was laid out sick at the time, he was unable to organise a storming and sacking expedition of the Police Station to effect their release as he had done a few times in the past. Those boys are now facing prosecution by the State! Even Gbolarumi, who was Alao-Akalas deputy during the latters eleven month illegal interregnum as governor (Gbolarumi was actually Adedibus PA before that stint) was reported recently to have been arrested for threatening the life of a fellow PDP member. It would appear that Ibadan (and Oyo State) is now settling down and would hopefully sanitise. Finally, I cant help but wonder what demands Adedibu will make of whomever is in charge in Hades. Anyway, I continue to wish him the kind of peace he bequeathed his environment.
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| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 23 July 2008 ) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted by Robot| 23.07.2008 00:18