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Okey Ndibe (A Motion Against Moving Forward) has identified one strand of rhetoric that constitutes a hindrance to any effort to reclaim the Nigerian state from the incompetent rogues and clowns that currently occupy its highest political offices: the move-forward phenomenon that is so quick at interjecting itself into urgent national problems and robbing the citizenry of a credible, lasting resolution.
Moving forward has become a standard rhetorical register for responding to burning issues demanding urgent resolution. The PDP stole an election and put YarAdua in power? That may be true but we need to move on and the nation needs to move forward. Obasanjo desecrated the presidency with his larcenous proclivities and his juvenile and tyrannically vindictive and narcissistic method of governance? Thats true, but we should move beyond Obasanjo; the nation needs to move forward.
If Iyabo, like her father, dubiously appropriated power sector contracts and Obasanjos henchmen helped themselves to generous bribes from Siemens and Wilbros, the nation should not be bogged down by a pedantic quest for justice and restitution.
Nigeria
still needs to move forward.
Nigeria
is bigger than individuals and their crimes and should not be held hostage by the desire of some people to illuminate and punish the political crimes of the recent past. We need to move forward.
The rhetoric of moving forward has become depressingly pervasive, punctuating every effort to demand justice, moral accountability, and redress for the many things that are wrong with
Nigeria
.
In the wake of electoral disaster of April, this rhetoric gained unusual currency because the press seemed to have bought into it. Newspaper storiesmany of them sponsored by investors in the corrupt PDP-controlled status quoraised the specter of a power vacuum if YarAduas dubious mandate was not at least temporarily respected. The press insinuated the seeming inevitability of YarAduas ascension to a questionable presidential mandate, and helped argue the futility of protests against the brazen electoral manipulations.
When some principled holdouts insisted on fresh elections, the press was used to counter such demands with the argument that the electoral tribunals should be allowed to do their job and that a rerun of the polls would vitiate the national necessity for moving forward. In this inexplicable logic, sustaining an electoral corruption was a move forward while an insistence on a credible rerun of the botched elections was a move backwards.
Ndibe has repudiated the move forward phenomenon in all its ramifications. But we can frame the issue more broadly beyond the Nigerian electoral quagmire, and a little differently.
At issue is whether this "move-on" philosophy is or is not an 'African' dispute resolution rhetoric. I pose this question because it seems to me that, more than other peoples, Africans are quick to move on from crisis and dispute, to avoid a frontal confrontation with the knotty issues besetting their countries. Some of us are sometimes too quick to avoid disputes and to advocate the pacifist idiom of "moving forward." We do this even when the political and economic stakes are high and invite a decisive resolution, and when a lack of resolution can only aggravate our countries' plight and imperil their futures.
For empirical proof, look around the continent and you'll see this "move-on" discourse at work in political debates and in operation. Look at
Uganda
. During the recent peace talks between the government and the LRA, the government, in disregard of international outcry and the interests, sensibilities, and rights of victims of the LRA's atrocities, offered complete amnesty to the rebels in exchange for their abandoning the rebellion. As explanation for this unexpectedly generous offer, the government invoked an 'African' judicial emphasis on reconciliation and a concomitant indifference to punishment, retribution, and restitution.
In post-war Sierra Leone, the former RUF rebels, responsible for the hacking of the limbs of innocents and the sexual enslavement of thousands women, were given cash payments and job training to help rehabilitate them into society while their victims, many of them maimed for life, are still housed in dingy war victims camps around the country and deprived of the barest necessities crucial to their post-conflict rehabilitation. How does one justify this seeming rewarding of war crimes and the neglect of their victims? Doesn't this send the message that evil, even war-time evil, does pay and carries no punitive backlash in the post-war aftermath? Well, the government would say no. So would many of those who helped craft the post-war peace efforts in
Sierra Leone
. Like the Ugandan government, they invoke the so-called reconciliatory imperative of African judicial systems and painfully explain why reconciliation requires glossing over past crimes, rejects the appetite for revenge, and authorizes the compensation of war criminals.
The Rwandan Gacaca system of justice, which was used to try genocide cases, is also cited as another demonstration of the African judicial privileging of reconciliation over justice (in the Western sense of punishment and restitution). Reconciliation in this sense is predicated on the principle that society must move on without righting past wrongs; that it must move on from disputes, not necessarily resolve such disputes. It also supposes that dispute resolution is not necessarily the distribution of blame, the pronouncement of culpability, or the proclamation and enforcement of punitive and restitutive sentences. In short, it is a glorified form of "moving forward." It is claimed that the priority in this judicial philosophy is not justice (in a supposedly narrow Western sense) but societal harmony. But how permanent will such a contrived--and forced--harmony be without the healing finality of justice and redress? Some people argue that justice is a precondition for enduring peace and they are right.
In political disputes across
Africa
, especially in disputed elections, the idiom of reconciliation and 'moving forward' has been similarly advanced to quench the demands for electoral justice, fairness, transparency, and integrity in the electoral process. Insistence on electoral rules being followed and a puritanical rejection of rigging, voting fraud, and other manipulations of the electoral system are sometimes dismissed as emanating from an unAfrican obsession with justice, redress, culpability, blame, punishment, and restitution. The discourse of "moving on" and allied pacifist constructs come into play to discredit principled and morally motivated demands for redress, fairness, justice, and punishment.
In discussions on the Nigerian electoral fiasco of April and on the recent Kenyan elections, these discourses of reconciliation, societal harmony, and peace have been introduced as a counterpoint to the principled demands that political incumbents respect the electorate and their expressed will and that they not manipulate the process in their favor and to exclude the opposition. The Nigerian and Kenyan problems are identical. We have two heavily rigged elections from which two so-called presidents are now benefiting and whose tainted outcomes are being rationalized with the argument that society must move on and that reconciliation trumps the search for electoral justice and truth.
I am personally troubled by this spate of suspicious, strategic, and sometimes self-interested invocations of a supposed reconciliatory imperative in African dispute resolution ideology. In fact I am not even sure that such a dubious ideology is African. When was a poll taken to determine that Africans value reconciliation and 'moving forward' over justice, judicial redress, truth, and restitution? And why is reconciliation, political or otherwise, stressed to the exclusion of redress and punishment?
My concern is precisely Okey Ndibe's. Moving on and reconciling sound great. But they have little or no deterrence value when they are pursued outside a framework of justice and judicial restoration and restitution. If stolen electoral mandates and the resultant political disputes are resolved in ways that allow the thieves to keep all or some of their stolen political power and rob the electorate of the chance to establish their electoral will and the opposition of the chance to claim a deserved victory, what will discourage the next generation of electoral thieves? And how do we build credibility, faith, and longevity into our democratization process with such an elastic notion of democracy and electoral integrity?
If war criminals are compensated for their crimes, their victims denied justice, and society deprived of the chance to set a punitive example for the purpose of deterrence, then what message are we sending to putative war criminals of the future?
The Africanization of a dubious conciliatory ethic, which collapses moral boundaries and disrespects the universally subscribed values of justice, fairness, truth, and redress, is dangerous to both our democracies and our societies. Such a dubious reconciliation is neither African nor capable of moving us forward from disputes.
Even if the idiom of 'moving forward' and reconciliation is African, we must de-Africanize it immediately or else there will soon be no safeguards against--or consequences for--political wrongdoing. Or else we will be incentivizing and subsidizing political misbehavior and electoral larceny. Reconciling with tyranny, war crimes, and electoral manipulation in the name of moving forward can only replicate these crimes.

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Posted by Robot| 14.01.2008 19:42